7 December 2006 – Fifteen years after nearly being
annihilated by Saddam Hussein, almost half of Iraq’s fabled marshlands of
Mesopotamia, considered by some to be the original Garden of Eden, have regained
their 1970s extent, thanks to a multi-million dollar programme managed by the UN
Environment Programme (UNEP).
Satellite images and analysis released by UNEP today
showed that almost 50 per cent of the total area, one of the world’s largest
wetland ecosystems, had been re-flooded with seasonal fluctuations, in sharp
contrast to agency images in 2001 that revealed that 90 per cent of the
Marshlands had already been lost.
They were ravaged by a vast drainage operation carried
out by Mr. Hussein after the 1991 Persian Gulf War in one of Iraq’s major
environmental and humanitarian disasters, with the desertification of
millennia-old wetlands, displacement of much of the indigenous population and
destruction of a unique cultural heritage.
Once totalling almost 9,000 square kilometres, the
Marshlands dwindled to just 760 square kilometres in 2002 and experts feared
they could disappear entirely by 2008.
As the regime fell in 2003, people began to open
floodgates and break down the embankments that had been built to drain the
Marshlands. Re-flooding has since occurred in some, but not all, areas. The
rehabilitation project – Support for Environmental Management of the Iraqi
Marshlands – which includes a series of local community-led campaigns, is funded
by Japan and managed by UNEP.
Up to 22,000 people living in the area are now getting
access to safe drinking water and 300 Iraqis have been trained in marshland
management techniques and policies, UNEP said today. The programme aims
eventually to provide clean water for up to 100,000.
The results of the project’s first phase will be
presented to a meeting of high-level Iraqi officials, local community leaders
and international donors in Kyoto, Japan, tomorrow.
By the middle of 2006, 23 kilometres of water
distribution pipes and 86 common distribution taps had been installed. A
sanitation system pilot project is being implemented in the community of Al-Chibayish
where inhabitants are facing health hazards from discharges of untreated
wastewater to a nearby canal.
“The key to the success of this project has been the
solid cooperation with Ministries of Environment and Municipalities and Public
Works, southern Governorates, local communities, and NGOs (non-governmental
organizations), and dedication of many Iraqis,” Per Bakken, Director of the UNEP
International Environmental Technology Centre said.
Source: UN News Service
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