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2003 Publications arrow "This is the Only Valley Where We Live": the Impact of the Munzur Dams



"This is the Only Valley Where We Live": the Impact of the Munzur Dams


Price: £5.00


This report, published in conjunction with the Corner House, provides the findings of a KHRP fact-finding mission undertaken to examine the likely impacts of a series of massive dams planned for the Munzur Valley in the Kurdish regions of Southeast Turkey. The Munzur Valley is Turkey's first and foremost national park, protected by domestic law. Now, it is the proposed site of a series of 8 dams and hydro-electric power plants (HEPPs) to be built by a consortium of companies led by US engineering firm Stone and Webster. Other companies involved include the Austrian firms VA Tech Hydro and Strabag and Turkish firm Soyal and ATA. The report first traces the tragic history of mass displacement in the Kurdish regions. Over 3 million people were forced from their homes and over 3,500 settlements destroyed during a campaign by Turkish security forces that peaked in severity during the mid 1990s. The problem of those wanting to return home bulks large in Turkish domestic politics. The report first highlights the link between mass displacement, those wanting to return home, and the proposed construction of the series of massive dams known as GAP. Secondly, the report analyses the rationales and impacts of GAP, examining its effects on local and Kurdish populations. Finally, this environmental/ human rights report provides the findings of its fact-finding mission to the region.(ISBN Number: 1 900 175 57 6)

Table of Contents

 

Foreword

4

SECTION 1:

Displacement

5


1.1

Origins of Kurdish displacement: 1921-1934

5


1.2

The site of the proposed Munzur dams: 1935-1950

8


1.3

The Modern Era

9

SECTION 2:

Political and Hydro-Electric Power: The GAP Dams

15


2.1

Official claims of GAP

15


2.2

"The Oil of the Future": Water and Regional Hegemony

16


2.3

GAP, Ilisu and the Kurds

17


2.4

GAP and Double Displacement

18

SECTION 3:

The Munzur Dams (Tunceli)

21


3.1

Origins and Corruption

21


3.2

Background: the Turkish Energy Market

21


3.3

The Munzur Dams: A Summary

22


3.4

Building the Munzur Dams

23


3.5

Official Claims and Admissions

24


3.6

The Absence of Environmental Impact Assessments

25


3.7

Concerns of the Local Communities

26


3.8

Environmental Concerns and Domestic Environmental law

28


3.9

Local Experience of Previous Dams

29

SECTION 4:

Conclusion and Recommendations

32


Appendices


A

Memo from President Turgut Özal to Prime Minister Derimel, February 1993

33


B

Turkey and Fulfilling the Copenhagen Criteria for Accession to the European Union: Theory or Practice? - Memo from the Kurdish Human Rights Project to the President of the European Union, EU Commissioner for Enlargement, Permanent Representative of the Member States (10 December 2002)

36


C

UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement

46


D

Munzur Valley Protection Association (MVPA) publication, Munzur Valley and Dam Issues, including features: 'Dams Planned to be Constructed in Munzur Valley'; 'What will be lost due to the planned dams in the Munzur Valley'; the demands of the Tunceli Solidarity Council; 'Discussion of pros and cons'; and "Munzur Valley National Park" Decree

55

 




 







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