UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

24 March 2003

UNEP Calls for Action Plan to Save Iraqi Marshlands

(Tells World Water Forum marshlands disappearing at alarming rate)
(1060)
United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) Executive Director Klaus
Toepfer says the post-war rehabilitation of Iraq should include a full
assessment and action plan for the restoration of the Mesopotamian
marshlands of southern Iraq, which are continuing to disappear at an
alarming rate.
According to a March 22 press release, Toepfer told the World Water
Forum that met March 16-23 in Kyoto, Japan that UNEP's Post Conflict
Assessment Unit stood ready to assist in any project to restore the
Iraqi wetlands. This unit has successfully drawn up action plans for
the Balkans and more recently Afghanistan and the Occupied Palestinian
Territories.
Two years have elapsed since UNEP drew the world's attention to the
plight of the Mesopotamian marshlands, which are home to the Marsh
Arabs as well as rare animal species. Satellite studies show that,
mainly as a result of drainage and damming, the wetlands of the
Tigris-Euphrates basin by 2001 were reduced to about 10 percent of
their original area, which covered between 15,000-20,000 square
kilometers.
Toepfer said a long-term recovery plan is needed, which will require a
holistic river basin approach based on the ultimate goal of sustaining
riverine ecology and in which all the Tigris-Euphrates riparian
countries -- Iran, Iraq, Syria and Turkey -- share the rivers' waters
in a coordinated and equitable manner.
"It is an environmental catastrophe for this region and underscores
the huge pressures facing wetlands and freshwater ecosystems across
the world," Toepfer said.
UNEP's report on the marshlands, entitled "The Mesopotamian
Marshlands: Demise of an Ecosystem (UNEP Report, 2001, updated 2003),"
can be found at the following Web site:
http://www.grid.unep.ch/activities/sustainable/tigris/marshlands/report.php
Following is the text of the press release:
(begin text)
United Nations Environment 
March 22, 2003
"Garden of Eden" in Southern Iraq Likely to Disappear Completely in
Five Years Unless Urgent Action Taken
UNEP Says Post-War Rehabilitation Should Include the Marshlands of
Mesopotamia for the Sake of People and Wildlife
Kyoto/Nairobi - The Marshlands of Mesopotamia, considered by some to
be the Biblical location of the Garden of Eden and known as the
fertile crescent, are continuing to disappear at an alarming rate.
Studies, disclosed today at the 3rd World Water Forum taking place in
Kyoto, Japan, indicate that of the 10 per cent of the marshlands left,
one third has disappeared in the past two years with many endangered
species such as the Sacred Ibis and African darter holding on at a
knife's edge.
Two years have elapsed since the United Nations Environment Program
(UNEP) drew the world's attention to the plight of the marshlands and
its unique culture, the Marsh Arabs who are the 5,000 year-old heirs
of the Babylonians and Sumerians.
Satellite studies, carried out by UNEP's collaborating GRID-Geneva
center and covering a period from the early 1970s to 2000, showed that
90 per cent of the marshlands, also home to rare and unique species
and a spawning ground for Gulf fisheries, had disappeared.
The new studies show that a further 325 square kilometers have dried
out since 2000 leaving just seven per cent of the original area.
Unless urgent action is taken to reverse the trend and rehabilitate
the marshlands, the entire wetland known as the Hawr Al-Hawizeh in
Iraq and Hawr Al-Azim in Iran, are likely to have gone in three to
five years.
Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director of UNEP who is attending the Forum,
said: "As we mark World Water Day 2003, we are reminded again of the
dramatic destruction of the Mesopotamian marshlands and their unique
culture and wildlife over the past decade. It is an environmental
catastrophe for this region and underscores the huge pressures facing
wetlands and freshwater ecosystems across the world".
"We have already lost half of the world's wetlands in the last 100
years, and the continued desiccation of the Mesopotamian marshlands
confirms that more decisive and concrete action is needed," he said.
Mr Toepfer said he hoped that the end of hostilities in Iraq and the
rehabilitation of the country would include a full assessment and
action plan for the restoration of the marshes.
UNEP's Post Conflict Assessment Unit, which has successfully carried
out environmental assessments and drawn up action plans for the
Balkans and more recently Afghanistan and the Occupied Palestinian
Territories, stood ready to assist in any project to restore the
wetlands.
Mr Toepfer said such an assessment needed to address all the issues
which are potentially impacting on the marshes. These include
extensive internal drainage programs and dams upstream including those
on the Euphrates and Tigris rivers. UNEP believes there is still a
last window of opportunity to reverse wetland desiccation and achieve
at least partial restoration. In the short term, an emergency release
of water from reservoir dams in Iran and Iraq to simulate the seasonal
flood is needed.
Iran reacted positively with a limited release of water to the
wetlands in March and April 2002 flooding the northern core part.
A long-term recovery plan is however needed. This will require a
holistic river basin approach based on the ultimate goal of sustaining
riverine ecology and in which all Tigris-Euphrates riparian countries
share the rivers' waters in a coordinated and equitable manner. An
integrated catchment plan would also give priority to allocating an
adequate amount of water to the wetlands, while water releases from
existing dams can be timed to mimic natural flow patterns and bring
the marshlands back to life.
The Mesopotamian marshlands are an integral part of the
Tigris-Euphrates river basin, which is shared by Iran, Iraq, Syria and
Turkey. UNEP first drew the world's attention to the demise of the
largest wetland ecosystem in the Middle East Mesopotamian marshlands
in May 2001 with hard evidence from satellite imagery capturing the
shrinkage of the marshlands' physical extent. The UNEP study (link
below) revealed that by spring 2000, a one thousand-square kilometer
vestige straddling the Iran-Iraq border was all that was left of the
extensive wetland complex, which originally covered an area of 15,000
- 20,000 square kilometers.
The report, The Mesopotamian Marshlands: Demise of an Ecosystem (UNEP
Report, 2001, updated 2003), can be found at the following Web site:
http://www.grid.unep.ch/activities/sustainable/tigris/marshlands/report.php
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list