 My name is Veronique de Vigrie. I'm a French photographer. I've been working with reportage by Getty Images for six years now. For this project I was in Bosnia in November 2013 for one week. There was one thing I didn't realise until then is that landmines is like intoxicate all your daily life and these people like they are surrounded by landmine fields but they have no choice because they live there to go through them. The challenge I faced was to make a gallery of portraits of these landmine victims. I tried to give with this portrait a sense of claustrophobia which reflects their life of living in beautiful landscape but not being able to access them because it's completely covered with landmines and other explosive remnants of war. What shocked me is that 20 years after the war the daily life is still affected by landmines. I met Miret who got involved in two different landmine accidents and lost one of his leg. He also lost 10 years after a brother in a landmine accident and a few months ago in a separate landmine accident his brother got injured and his sister-in-law was killed. How can you go back to your house and complain about an headache or something like that once you see that? It's a life lesson, yeah. One of the landmine victims we met, Zoran, told us that he founded a volleyball league for landmine victims. Once they get their outfit and they go into the court you feel like they are just themselves again. I guess like everybody is equal. Most of them were soldiers often fighting against each other and they have this kind of black humour making jokes about the war. It seems to me like it was a kind of therapy for them to go over the war, go over the injuries. Having things and playing is a big message of hope for the country because during the time lapse of the match they all play together, doesn't matter which faction they are from. During my time in Bosnia I realised that landmines still affect daily life of these people even 20 years after the war and that there is no way they will be able to move forward until all landmines are cleared.