our networks
tlcanimal planetscience channelmilitary channeldiscovery health channel
discovery storediscovery adventures
 
 

Iraq's 'Garden of Eden' May Get Global Protection

AFP
Print
Email
 

Photos

Future World Heritage Site?
Future World Heritage Site? | Video: Discovery Earth News
 

Sept. 5, 2008 -- The United Nations on Friday launched a bid to designate Iraq's famed marshlands, which were ravaged by Saddam Hussein, a World Heritage site after a four-year restoration project.

The swampy southern region is believed by some to be the inspiration for the biblical Garden of Eden. Saddam drained the marshlands after the end of the first Gulf War to punish Iraq's Shiite majority for an uprising.

The UN Environment Program (UNEP) wrapped up a four-year project funded by Japan and Italy that restored more than half of the marshlands. Iraqi authorities took over plans for further rehabilitation.

Attending a final meeting on the project in Kyoto, Japan, UNEP chief Achim Steiner said the agency would work with UNESCO, the UN's cultural body, to list the marshlands as a World Heritage site.

Narmin Othman, Iraq's environment minister, said her government also planned to make the marshlands a national park, according to a UNEP statement.

"Because of what Saddam Hussein did, the marshlands were in danger of completely disappearing, as was the centuries-old culture of the Marsh Arabs," Othman said, according to the statement.

"It had become an ecological but also a human tragedy," she said.

Italy has agreed to fund the effort to list the marshlands as a World Heritage site, which would entail drafting plans to ensure the area's preservation, UNEP spokesman Nick Nuttall said.

The last available satellite images showed that around 58 percent of the marshlands had been restored.

The marshlands stretched across some 20,000 square kilometers (7,700 square miles) in the 1970s. Most residents are Shiite Muslims, who form the majority in Iraq but were marginalized until the U.S.-led invasion overthrew Saddam in 2003.


Related Links:

Discovery News blog: Earth Impacts

How Stuff Works: What Is a World Heritage Site?

How Stuff Works: Geography of Iraq


 
advertisement

Put Discovery News on Your Site!

 
newsletter
 
SITE SEARCH
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTERS
CREDITS ALI AL-SAADI/AFP/Getty Images |
DISCOVERY SITES Discovery Channel / TLC / Animal Planet / Discovery Health / Science Channel / Planet Green / Discovery Kids / Military Channel /
Discovery News /Investigation Discovery / HD Theater / Turbo / FitTV / HowStuffWorks / TreeHugger / Petfinder / PetVideo / Discovery Education
VIDEO Discovery Channel Video Player
SHOP Discovery Store / DVDs & Books / Custom Gear / Toys & Games / Telescopes / Gift Sets/ Planet Earth DVD Sets
MOBILE iPhone App / Wallpaper & Ringtones / Mobile Video / Mobile Web / Text Alerts
CUSTOMER SERVICE Viewer Relations / Free Newsletters / RSS / Sitemap / TV FAQs
CORPORATE Discovery Communications, LLC / Advertising / Careers @ Discovery / Privacy Policy / Visitor Agreement
ATTENTION! We recently updated our privacy policy. The changes are effective as of September 10, 2008. To see the new policy, click here. Questions? See the policy for the contact information.