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whottt
08-24-2005, 07:15 PM
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9063147/




Recovery of Iraq's biblical marshes a ‘phenom’
U.N. touts efforts after Saddam ordered wetlands drained
Slide show


• Iraq's marshlands

A U.N. report found that efforts to restore Iraq's famed marshlands are working well. Click “Launch” for images from before and after Saddam Hussein's decision to drain the area in the 1990s.
MSNBC staff and news service reports
Updated: 4:13 p.m. ET Aug. 24, 2005

TOKYO - A decade after Saddam Hussein had them drained to punish their occupants, the marshlands of southern Iraq, said to be the inspiration for the biblical Garden of Eden, are recovering at a “phenomenal rate” since Saddam's fall, the United Nations said Wednesday.

New satellite imagery shows a rapid increase in water and vegetation cover in just the past three years, with the marshes rebounding to about 37 percent of the area they covered in 1970, up from about 10 percent in 2002, the United Nations Environment Program said in a report describing a multimillion dollar restoration project funded by Japan.

“The evidence of their rapid revival is a positive signal, not only for the environment and the local communities who live there, but must be seen as a contribution to wider peace and security for the Iraqi people and the region as a whole,” UNEP executive director Klaus Toepfer said in a statement.

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Saddam drained much of the Mesopotamian waters between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers by building dams, dikes and canals to punish the Marsh Arab inhabitants for supporting a Shiite Muslim rebellion following the 1991 Persian Gulf War. He also ordered thousands killed.

All but 40,000 of the 450,000 locals fled or were killed.

‘Crime against humanity’
Iraq’s minister of water resources, Abdul Latif Jamal Rashid, called Saddam’s decision to drain the marshlands “a crime against humanity” and said he hopes 80 percent of the marshlands will be restored in three years.

“It will help Iraqis return to a traditional way of life,” he said on the sidelines of a conference on global water management in Stockholm. “Even people in the capital, who have never seen the marshlands, are really proud of the project.”

The marshes, home to rare species like the Sacred Ibis bird, had been the Marsh Arabs' source for fishing, boating and small agriculture.

Of almost 3,600 square miles of marshes in 1970, the area shrank by 90 percent to 304 square miles by 2002. As recently as 2001, some experts forecast the marshlands would disappear by 2008.

But restoration efforts since the fall of Saddam reversed much of the damage, bringing the current area to 1,400 square miles. The expanse swelled to 50 percent of the 1970 range in the spring but then dwindled due to summer evaporation.

Iraqi engineers and tribes began re-flooding parts of the wetlands by cutting gashes in dikes in the euphoria of Saddam’s ouster in 2003.

Japan takes lead
Last year, the United Nations announced an $11 million project funded by Japan to help restore the marshes and provide clean drinking water and sanitation for 100,000 people living there. The program is providing settlements with water treatment systems and restoring reed beds that act as natural water filters. It is also training 250 Iraqis in wetland management and restoration.

Still, re-flooding the marshes requires a delicate balance of salt and plant life. The UNEP warns that more detailed field analysis of soil and water quality is needed to gauge the exact state of rehabilitation.

“While the re-flooding bodes well for the Iraqi marshes, their recovery will take many years,” Toepfer said. “We must continue to monitor the situation carefully and make the necessary long-term investment in marshlands management.”

At one time, the wetlands were the largest in the Middle East, filtering polluted water from northern cities and purifying it before it reached the southern rivers and the city of Basra.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

whottt
08-24-2005, 07:16 PM
Remember when Libs cared about environmental issues and womens rights?


Ahh those were the days.

whottt
08-24-2005, 07:36 PM
Positive news from Iraq = Crickets Chirping

MannyIsGod
08-24-2005, 08:35 PM
Good shit, but if you're trying to use the environmental work done here to justify the Iraq war, then I urge you to look into the environmental impact of the entire war and not simply the part you can spin for your purposes.

All things aside, the restoration of the marshes is a good thing.

boutons
08-24-2005, 09:10 PM
Meanhwile, the Everglades is still decades away, if ever, from recovering from the butchering by the US Army Corps of Engineers.

Whott, you've lost it. You're scratching around in the sand for ANYTHING positive about the bullshit Iraq war. If restoring the Iraq marshes would have cost anything, shrub wouldn't pay for it. The marsh Arabs themselve began breaking down the berms and levees to let the water flow again right after the war started. After getting betrayed by Poppy, they know better than to expect anything from the USA.

It's over, shrub has handed Iraq to sectarian/ethnic strife and eventual control by Iran.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/24/AR2005082401454.html

"Bush's status as a wartime president has helped him politically in the past, but his advisers said they are worried that tragedies in Iraq -- and a sour reaction at home -- could turn that into a burden this fall. White House officials said they viewed the speech, the second of three he plans to give in the two weeks before Labor Day, as a crucial opportunity for Bush to show both compassion and resolve when his conduct of the war is increasingly being publicly questioned, and polls of public support are flirting with Vietnam War-era depths."

shrub keeps on robotically vowing this and that, mouthing platitudes and homilies and slogans in his 3rd-grade syntax and simplistic sentences (actually, he's lucky he can't speak like an educated, intelligent adult or the red-staters wouldn't be able to follow).

shrub/dickhead and the posse of asshole desk-jockey sycophants and ideologues around him have lost all credibility.

The worm has turned. shrub's a lame-duck president. From now until 2006 mid-terms will show even Repug congressmen rats to be abandoning his sinking ship to save their own stinking hides.

And the terrorists get stronger and stronger, the US and world become less safe as shrub pisses away US blood and $$$ into the Iraqi sands.