At the other end of each leg, a round, white plastic disk the size of a small Frisbee is attached via a black rubber car part for drive shafts, called a CV-joint boot. Assembled, the spherical kafon looks like a giant tumbleweed or seed head. And like the dandelion puff it moves with the wind: the kafon is designed to be blown around, exploding anti-personnel mines as it rolls on the ground. With the legs made from bamboo, they are easily replaceable. Once they are blown off it’s simply a matter of screwing on others, which means the kafon can be used over and over. Inside the steel ball, a GPS device plots the kafon’s path as it rolls through an area that may be mined and shows on a computerized map exactly where it is safe to walk. Hassini is still in the testing stages, notably to make sure there is 100 percent contact between the kafon’s “feet” and the ground, so no mine is missed. But initial trials showed promising results.
“We know this is a working prototype and that we need to do lots of testing still,” said Hassani, saying the kafon would not be deployed in real situations until it was 100-percent proven. The designer and his brother Mahmud, 27, are now looking for sponsors, notably through an online platform. They hope to raise £100,000 (€123,000 $160,000 dollars) in donations by next month to fund development and take the device to Afghanistan in August for more trials. It will be the brothers’ first time home after fleeing Taliban-ruled Kabul, Massoud first in 1998 then Mahmud two years later, in arduous treks through Pakistan and Uzbekistan. They finally made their way to the Netherlands, where they were accepted as refugees and today hold Dutch citizenship. Massoud landed a place at the Design Academy Eindhoven – regarded as one of the world’s foremost industrial design schools – where he first conceived the project in 2010.
“I had to design a toy from my childhood,” he said. “I went back into my childhood in a dream. I saw the toys we made and how they rolled into a minefield. We could never get them back.” Despite huge progress in mine-clearing in Afghanistan in recent years, it remains one of the most-mined countries in the world. Since 1989, around 650,000 anti-personnel mines, 27,000 anti-tank mines and more than 15 million other pieces of unexploded ordnance have been collected, according to the UN-funded Mine Action Coordination Centre of Afghanistan (MACCA). In June this year, the UN said there were still 5,233 “danger zones” covering 588 square kilometers (227 square miles) putting more than 750,000 people at risk. At least 812 people were wounded or killed last year by mines, victim-triggered improvised explosive devices and other ordnance left over from the Afghan wars, Nobel Peace Prize-winning organization Handicap International said. More than half of the victims were children.
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