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Turkey going to devastate archaeological treasure

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  • Turkey going to devastate archaeological treasure

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Turkey going to devastate archaeological treasure
    14.07.2008 12:31 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Jointly with the Armenian community of Crimea,
    Secretary of the Union of Armenian Writers and Union of Armenian
    Artists Sassoun Baryan called on the international community to
    prevent destruction of Armenian cultural heritage in Turkey, reported
    Yerkramas, the newspaper of Armenians of Russia.

    The statement says in part, `We, Armenians, were exiled from our
    motherland and scattered throughout the globe resuscitating our
    culture and cherishing our centuries-old history. Armenian cultural
    monuments are protected everywhere and we were shocked to hear that
    Turkey is planning to inundate one of the most ancient monuments of
    Armenian history ` the cave-town of Hasankeyf. We are indignant at
    cruelty of Turkish authorities which perpetrate another genocide, this
    time against Armenian history.'

    Hasankeyf, named by Arabs in the times of their sway, is an ancient
    Armenian city located along the Tigris River in the Batman Province of
    southeastern Anatolia, Turkey, in modern times it is densely inhabited
    by Kurds. It is an ancient city, with roots going back 10,000 years.

    In 2006, controversial project to build a dam in Turkey has
    re-emerged, four years after it collapsed when major backers pulled
    out. The dam is supposed to be the second largest in Turkey by volume
    of water.

    The Turkish government says the project, planned for more than two
    decades, will provide much-needed hydro-electric energy and jobs in a
    poor region.

    But opponents believe it will devastate the area's environment and
    cultural heritage, as well as displacing more than 50,000
    people. Dozens of local government ministries, community groups and
    NGOs have formed a coalition, the Initiative to Keep Hasankeyf Alive,
    to oppose the dam.

    British construction firm Balfour Beatty and Swiss bank UBS, part of
    the European-Turkish consortium involved, pulled out amid
    international concerns about the project's social and environmental
    impact. A new consortium has now been formed, headed by Austrian firm
    VA Tech Hydro, but its applications for export credit guarantees from
    the Austrian, Swiss and German governments have not yet been
    decided. NGOs in several countries are appealing for the guarantees -
    given by governments to protect firms from risk in big overseas
    infrastructure projects - not to be granted.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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