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Last chance for the forests of Armenia (Updated)

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  • Last chance for the forests of Armenia (Updated)

    Oneworld.net, 17 June 2005 (Updated)

    Last chance for the forests of Armenia

    Onnik Krikorian

    Government-connected businessmen and state officials engaged in the
    illegal export of timber from Armenia are mostly to blame for the former
    Soviet republic~Rs dwindling number of forests. Whereas 11 per cent of
    the republic was covered by forests in 1991, the figure stands at below
    8 per cent today. Environmentalists warn that unless current trends are
    reversed, Armenia will be forestless by 2024.

    In recent weeks, such concerns have have been reinforced by plans to
    build a highway through the Shikahogh Nature Reserve situated in the
    southern-most Siunik region of the republic. Tens of thousands of trees
    in the reserve will be felled in government plans to build a second,
    90-kilometer road leading to the Iranian border. Shikahogh is habitat
    for over 1000 species of plants and fauna such as leopards.
    Environmental activists and NGOs in Armenia are up in arms against this
    latest threat especially as work on the $16 million project has already
    begun.

    Blockaded by Turkey and Azerbaijan as a result of the frozen conflict
    with the latter over the mainly Armenian-inhabited territory of Nagorno
    Karabagh, Armenia relies on its two other neighbors, Georgia and Iran
    for the bulk of its import and export. Approximately ten per cent of all
    imports into Armenia come from the Islamic Republic via mountainous
    terrain that often makes the journey dangerous during the winter.

    The government argues that it is for this reason that a new road should
    be constructed even though the proposed route will not only pass through
    the Nature Reserve but also the centuries-old Mtnadzor forest.

    Environmentalists say that the new road offers no advantage over that
    which already exists and accuse the government of having other motives
    for the project. Because the Shikahogh reserve and forest are currently
    protected under national law, they say that the new highway is simply a
    way to "legitimize" logging and hunting in the area.

    According to the Armenia Now online publication, the value of the 14,000
    mature and 90,000 younger trees that stand in the path of bulldozers is
    estimated at approximately $1 million.

    "If they refuse to accept any of the proposed alternatives then the road
    is not the real issue," said Karen Manvelyan, National Director of the
    World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in Armenia in an interview with Hetq Online.
    "The plan for a ~Qstrategic' road is simply to get at the forest and the
    wood. Governmental officials say that the highway has strategic
    importance but none can explain why they have chosen this way through
    the reserve."

    If the road passes through the reserve, the government will violate
    several of Armenia~Rs international commitments as signatories to the UN
    Framework Convention on Climate Change, UN Convention on Biodiversity,
    UN Convention to Combat Desertification and the European Convention on
    Landscape," says Jeffrey Tufenkian, President of the Armenian Forests NGO.

    "It also breaks various national laws and contradicts many decrees by
    the Armenian Government such as the State Strategy and National Action
    Plan for Development of Specially Protected Natural Areas," he adds.
    "Construction will also infringe upon the Law on Environmental Impact
    Expertise as there was no environmental impact assessment conducted for
    the concept of passage of the road through the natural reserve."

    In fact, the Environmental Impact Assessment that the government had to
    undertake only occurred after construction started in May. In an
    interview with Radio Free Europe / Radio Europe at the beginning of
    June, however, the Armenian Transport and Communications Minister,
    Andranik Manukyan, added insult to injury by saying that the road would
    be constructed regardless of what the assessment concluded.

    Amalia Kostanyan, Chairperson of the Armenian branch of Transparency
    International, the world~Rs leading anti-corruption watchdog, is not
    impressed.

    "The plan was examined by the State Non-Commercial Organization on
    Environmental Expertise," says Kostanyan, "The law says that the
    construction of any project can only start after the positive conclusion
    of an impact assessment. In the case of this road, however, no findings
    have been released ~V neither positive nor negative ~V and in fact, the
    assessment was returned by the government with the request that it be
    revised."

    Environmentalists are equally unimpressed and are particularly concerned
    by what they see as a cynical ploy to legalize construction on the
    reserve by
    Moreover, the new road would also allow easy access to loggers and poachers
    changing the status of Shikahogh from a Nature Reserve to that of a
    National Park. Such a dangerous precedent would immediately open it up
    to poachers and other commercial activities, they argue.

    Meanwhile, public outcry has at least united NGOs in Armenia. Dozens of
    NGOs working within a coalition to save the nature reserve say that an
    alternate route should be taken and, already, extensive media coverage
    has forced the government to suspend construction for 15 days. However,
    while construction in the reserve has not yet started, bulldozers are
    still clearing the way for the access road.

    As a result, environmentalists are convinced that the Armenian
    government has no intention to bow to public pressure to adhere to its
    own national law and international commitments.

    "They seem to be proceeding in a way that indicates they have already
    made their decision regardless of what the public and NGOs have to say,"
    says Tufenkian. The American environmental activist of Armenian descent
    is also part of the coalition to save Shikahogh. A public hearing
    scheduled to be held in Yerevan on 17 June might well represent the last
    stand of environmentalists to prevent further deforestation in Armenia.

    "The coalition of organizations working to save the Shikahogh Reserve
    has taken it upon itself to organize this public forum and has had to
    invite the relevant government ministries," says Tufenkian. "Hopefully
    they will yield to public pressure and protect the reserve by choosing
    another route for the highway. However, it is possible that even if the
    government attends the public hearings, they will be doing so
    insincerely and simply as a matter of formality."

    Concern over the fate of Shikahogh and Mtnadzor has also spread far
    beyond the boundaries of the former Soviet republic. In the influential
    Armenian Diaspora, Carolyn Mugar, founder of the Armenian Tree Project
    and Executive Director of the US Farm Aid organization, has already
    started a letter writing campaign to lobby the Armenian Embassy in
    Washington.

    Since then, the Minister for Transport and Communication, Andranik
    Manukian, has told the ArmInfo news agency that the government would now
    look at alternate routes and requested that environmentalists put in as
    much energy into securing extra finance for the project as they have in
    protesting. Paradoxically, he also declared that this "change of heart"
    had nothing to do with the campaign by environmentalists to save Shikahogh.

    But given earlier broken promises that construction would be suspended,
    environmentalists are not taking the government at their word just yet.
    "There is not a single official decision and we do not know how the road
    will be constructed," says Nazeli Vardanian, Director of the Armenian
    Forests NGO. "So, non-governmental organizations must continue the
    struggle."

    ---
    http://www.oneworld.net/article/view/113535/1/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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