UK
Report Says 60,000 Affected by Turkish Dam
Plan
LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) -
Nearly 60,000 people would have their homes
or land flooded by the proposed Ilisu dam
project in southeast Turkey, a new report
for the British government said on Tuesday.
Britain's government
commissioned the environmental impact report
to help decide whether to underwrite
participation in the project by British
builders Balfour Beatty Plc, part of a
consortium negotiating to build the dam
across the Tigris river.
Trade and Industry Secretary
Patricia Hewitt will make a decision after
September 7 on whether to grant the export
credit guarantees, officials said.
Until then, the government is
studying the report and inviting public
comment on the project.
"We've always said that
we would want to look at the environmental
and social impact of the dam before any
decision," a spokesman for Prime
Minister Tony Blair spokesman said.
Opponents of the project say
it will displace tens of thousands of Kurds,
harm the environment and stoke tensions with
downstream neighbours Syria and Iraq over
water supplies.
Former Trade and Industry
Secretary Stephen Byers said in 1999 he was
"minded" to approve export credits
for the project if Turkey met conditions on
environmental issues and resettlement of the
mainly Kurdish population.
The report Byers commissioned,
which his successor Hewitt is now studying,
said some 59,314 people would be affected by
the flooding caused by the proposed dam
meaning they would lose all or part of their
land to the resulting reservoir.
It said 43,733 of these
actually live in the areas to be affected.
The others do not live there but their
property would suffer and they could still
claim expropriation or resettlement rights.
"The area to be impacted
comprises hundreds of archaeological sites
documenting more than 100,000 years of human
occupancy," the report added.
The remains of Hasankeyf, a
large historic site dating back 2,000 years
and with "great religious importance"
for local people, would be flooded, it said.
Hewitt declined comment on the
report, but invited public comment on the
matter by September 7.
Balfour Beatty said it had
received a copy of the report and was
studying it.
"Whilst Balfour Beatty is
neither the promoter nor the proposer of the
project, it is taking an active and
responsible role in evaluating, with other
parties, the environmental and social
impacts of he project in order that
appropriate decisions can be taken,"
the company said in a statement.
Source:
The
Kurdistan Observer
www.kurdistanobserver.com
Added
at Kurdforum: 18 November 2001