In 2017, the government of
Belarus announced that it had destroyed its stockpiles of PFM-1 mines. The last 78 PFM-1 mines held by Belarus were destroyed as the highlight of the closing ceremony marking the elimination of their landmine stock. In a November 2008 presentation,
Ukraine indicated that it had destroyed 101,088 PFM-1 mines per the convention in 1999. Following the agreement between the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine and
NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA, formerly known as NAMSO) on 1 September 2012, a three-way agreement between
Ukraine,
NSPA and the EU was signed, which figurated that the EU would provide 3.689 million
euros for the destruction of 3.3 million mines. In 2013, the NSPA provided assistance in destruction of 300,000 mines. After failing to meet the
Ottawa Treaty deadline of November 2018 on the destruction of its anti-personnel mines, Ukraine requested the deadline be extended to 1 June 2021, later asking for further extension on 8 June 2020. In 2019, 67,236 mines were destroyed. Amid continuing conflict in the Donbas region, in 2020 Ukraine refused to destroy any PFM-1 mines. In 2021, Ukraine's PFM-1 stockpile was reported at 3,363,828 mines.
Russia, as well as the
United States,
China, and several other countries, are not signatories of the
Ottawa Treaty (the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention). == Military use==