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  • Lake Van Dying

    LAKE VAN DYING

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    15.05.2008 12:26 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Lake Van, the fifth largest lake in Europe, is
    dying. Unless urgent measures are taken, the lake will dry up within
    the next 10-15 years.

    The Turkish Marine Environment Protection Association (TURMEPA)
    has included Lake Van in its project 'Limitless Blue' that has been
    carried out for two years to save coastlines.

    As it works to protect a coastline of 8,333 kilometer from Hopa to
    Iskenderun, TURMEPA plans to save Lake Van as well. The association
    has organized an event to clean the shores of the lake.

    Esref Cerrahoglu, TURMEPA executive board chairman, said, "According
    to reports of experts, pearl mullets will die out in 10-15 years. Lake
    Van will become a source of pollution and will not be suitable to
    swim in. Taking some urgent measures could save the lake, which is
    an example of very significant historic and ecological richness of
    the region. This is why we are also working for Lake Van as well as
    our coastlines."

    As part of a project titled "Limitless Blue," for two years TURMEPA has
    been giving courses on the protection of the seas to primary school
    students living on the coastlines. There were 105,000 students from
    Van who participated in one of the courses last week, the Turkish
    Daily News reports.

    Situated in historical Armenia, Lake Van is Europe's fifth largest
    lake. The city of Van located on the eastern shore of Lake Van
    was the capital of the Urartian kingdom in the 9th century BC. Its
    ancient inhabitants called themselves Nairi and the city was a major
    Armenian center.

    Despite courageous resistance, the city's Armenian population was
    devastated during World War I by Ottoman troops as a part of the
    Armenian Genocide.

    Holy Cross church situated on Akhtamar Island in Lake Van was
    reconstructed not long ago and transformed into museum. There is no
    cross on the top but a Turkish flag and a portrait of modern Turkey's
    founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk are stuck at the entrance.
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