Архив метки: World Heritage

Results of 2018 monitoring of the Talgar World Heritage Site

Results-of-2018-monitoring-of-the-Talgar-World-Heritage-SiteIn 2014, Talgar site of ancient settlement was included in the World Heritage List as a part of the joint nomination from China, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgystan: Silk Roads: the Routes Network of Chang’an-Tianshan Corridor. Talgar site is one of the eight Kazakhstan sites included in this nomination. It is located 25 km east of the city of Almaty, near the Almaty nature reserve, in the protection zone of the Ile-Alatau National Park.

The Ecological Society “Green Salvation” monitors the condition of the Talgar site since 2015. By the results of the 2017 photo monitoring, a report was prepared and published on the website of the organization in Russian and English languages. The present report is a continuation of this material. It includes the period from March to December 2018.

 

See more: Talgar (Talkhiza) ancient settlement – which belongs to the World Heritage sites


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Выезд представителей Центра всемирного наследия и ИКОМОС на городище Талгар

Сегодня, 8 ноября, состоялся выезд представителей Центра всемирного наследия (World Heritage Centre UNESCO) и ИКОМОС (ICOMOS), а также представителей Министерства культуры и спорта РК, Министерства иностранных дел РК (Национальная комиссия по делам ЮНЕСКО), специалистов Института археологии, местных органов власти, Управления пассажирского транспорта и автомобильных дорог Алматинской области, общественности и СМИ на городище Талгар. Выемка под полотно дороги, проложенная через южную часть городища, практически полностью засыпана, установлены информационные щиты. Однако строительство моста продолжается. Представители миссии Центра всемирного наследия и ИКОМОС выражают свое недоумение относительно сложившейся ситуацией. Они продолжат свою работу и позже представят выводы.

The public concerned by the condition of ancient settlement Talgar are addressing the International University Sports Federation

The public and the Ecological Society “Green Salvation” concerned by the condition of the World Heritage property — ancient settlement Talgar, are addressing President of the International University Sports Federation with a request to assist in preserving the ancient settlement Talgar and stopping its destruction. Sports shall develop in the name of creation, not destruction.

***

October 3, 2016.

To: President of the International University Sports Federation
Matytsin Oleg Vasilyevich
Maison du Sport International
Av. de Rhodanie, 54
Lausanne, Switzerland, CH-1007
Tel.: +41 (0) 216130810
Fax: +41 (0) 216015612
E-mail: fisu@fisu.net
Website: www.fisu.net

Copy:

To: Head of the State Fund  “Directorate for Preparation and Conducting
of the 28th World Winter Universiade of 2017 in the city of Almaty”
Nurov Nail Faridovitch
050013 Almaty, 280 Baizakova st.,
Tel: +7 (727) 313-23-56 (ext. 217)
E-mail: office@almaty2017.kz

Dear Mr. President, dear members of the Federation!

The 28th World Winter Universiade will take place in the city of Almaty on January 29 through February 8, 2017.  Alatau Cross Country Skiing and Biathlon Stadium will be one of the locations for the Universiade. Competitions in biathlon, cross country skiing, and Nordic combined skiing will take place here during the games. Alatau Cross Country Skiing and Biathlon Stadium is located 50 km away from the city of Almaty, near the Akbulak Mountain Ski Resort in the Gorge Soldatskoe, Talgar District of Almaty Oblast.

Ecological Society “Green Salvation” welcomes and supports development of sports, but we are sincerely concerned by the situation which arose around one of the sites of the Universiade —  Alatau Cross Country Skiing and Biathlon Stadium. At the present time, an auto road “Birlik-Almalyk-Ryskulov-Bereke-Akbulak” is being constructed to this site. Some segments of the road and a bridge across Talgar river are already built. According to the project proposal, the road will pass through archeological monument  of the Republic of Kazakhstan — medieval settlement Talgar (Talhiz), which in 2014, was included into the UNESCO World Heritage List (http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1442/). Talgar settlement is a component within the serial World Heritage property Silk Roads: the Routes Network of Chang’an-Tianshan Corridor. There are 33 of such components in this corridor from central China to Kazakhstan. 8 (eight) of these components are located on the territory of Kazakhstan, and 3 are on the territory of Kyrgyzstan.

The auto road will “cut Talgar settlement into two parts”, which will, naturally, cause irreversible damage to the medieval settlement — a World Heritage property.

This threatens to lead not only to an international scandal, but also to a loss of trust and authority which Kazakhstan is eager to strengthen on the international arena.

The 40th session of the World Heritage Committee took place in Istanbul on July 10 through 20. A decision about Kazakhstan’s compliance with the Convention requirements was adopted during a meeting on July 13th. (http://whc.unesco.org/en/decisions/6699/), according to which, it was recommended “to stop immediately the road construction through the settlement, explore other routes outside the boundaries of the Talgar site and its buffer zone, and to dismantle the parts of the bridge that have already been constructed”.

But till the present moment, these recommendations have not been implemented! Construction of the road across the ancient settlement is being conducted in accelerated rates, the bridge has not been dismantled.

The facts indicated above make it evident that some public authorities do not welcome, nor support “responsible approach to environmental protection issues”, do not promote “ecologically sustainable development of sports”, do not contribute to a positive heritage from sports development by the city of Almaty and Kazakhstan in general.

Participants of the Universiade — people who are already becoming members of the Olympic movement, must strictly follow the principles of the Olympic Charter of the International Olympic Committee: “to encourage and support a responsible concern for environmental issues, to promote sustainable development in sports, …to encourage and support initiatives blending sport with culture and education”.

The public and the Ecological Society “Green Salvation” concerned by the condition of the World Heritage property — ancient settlement Talgar, are addressing you and the International University Sports Federation with a request to assist in preserving the ancient settlement Talgar and stopping its destruction. Sports shall develop in the name of creation, not destruction.

The public concerned by the condition of the ancient settlement Talgar

World Heritage Centre
UNESCO
7, Place de Fontenoy
75352 Paris CEDEX 07
France
Tel.: +33 (0)1 45 68 24 96
Fax: +33 (0)1 45 68 55 70
E-mail: wh-info@unesco.org

To Mechtild Rössler
Director of the Division for Heritage and the UNESCO World Heritage Centre
M.Rossler@unesco.org

To Mr. Feng Jing
CHIEF OF UNIT
Asia and the Pacific Unit (CLT/HER/WHC/APA)
F.Jing@unesco.org

Dear Mrs. Mechtild Rössler.

Dear Mr. Feng Jing.

Ecological Society «Green Salvation» (hereafter referred to as ES (i)), concerned by the condition of one of the World Heritage Sites – Talgar ancient settlement (Silk Roads: the Routes Network of Chang’an-Tianshan Corridor [China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Ref: 1442 ] (ii)), has to inform you about a failure in meeting the site’s preservation and maintenance regulations (iii).

Information.

Serious public concern is caused by a lack of access to full and trustworthy information about measures undertaken by state authorities in order to preserve the site, about factors threatening to its integrity, and also by the quality of the provided official information.

1. According to the 2015 Report about condition of preservation of monuments (hereafter referred to as the Report) provided by the Ministry of Culture and Sports of the Republic of Kazakhstan to the World Heritage Committee on January 15, 2016 (iv), the historical and architectural master plan and conceptual scheme map of the area were not prepared to the moment of the Report publication.

2. Satellite image attached to the indicated Report (v) contains outdated information (from approximately spring 2014) and does not reflect the real state of affaires appeared towards the end of 2015. From the west side of the settlement, a bridge over Talgar river was built. It is not on the satellite image. The bridge was supposed to connect two segments of the road leading towards a sports complex. The road was planned to be built through the ancient settlement (see the photo No.01 in the Attachment). At the present moment, the construction is stopped, in particular, because of public protests.

The satellite image also does not show new buildings which were built later right up against the northeast side of the ancient settlement. The more up-to-date satellite images received from the Internet, clearly show the changes appeared in the area from the spring of 2014 to August 2015, in particular: constructed bridge, new houses built near the northeast side of the ancient settlement, bore pits, which cut the wall of the ancient settlement in two places (see the map No.02 in the Attachment).

3. According to the information published on the Convention website, Kazakhstan’s state organs do not inform the Committee regarding “information on any threat or damage to or loss of Outstanding Universal Value, integrity and/or authenticity for which the property was inscribed on the World Heritage List” (vi).

4. The public does not possess of trustworthy and full information either. Our organization addressed multiple times to the Ministry of Culture and Sports with a request to provide a historical and cultural master plan and a conceptual scheme map of the area with an indication of the protection zone of the historical and cultural heritage site and location of monuments of history and culture and newly discovered objects of historical and cultural heritage.

As follows from the Report (vii), in 2015, even the local population was not informed about the boundaries of the World Heritage Site.

5. The informational display about the World Heritage Site located at the border of the ancient settlement does not contain information about the fact that the nomination is held together with the People’s Republic of China and Kyrgyz Republic. It is not indicated that the site is protected by the state. The informational display contains multiple grammatical errors in Russian (see the photo No.03, 04 in the Attachment).

6. As for February 26, 2016, the information about inclusion of Talgar site of ancient settlement into the World Heritage List is not published on the website of the National Commission of the Republic of Kazakhstan for UNESCO and ISESCO (after more than a year and a half) (viii).

7. Because of the failure to provide information to the public and to our organization, the ES had to address a court on September 19, 2015, with a demand: «To oblige the Ministry to provide the ES «Green Salvation» with the earlier requested documents, in particular, architectural master plan and conceptual scheme map of the area, which must include protection zone of the site of historical and cultural heritage and specified the location of the monuments of history and culture and newly discovered objects of historical and cultural heritage.»

On November 13, 2015, the court refused the ES to satisfy the lawsuit.

On March 2, 2016, the Appeal Board of the Astana City Court denied the ES in satisfying the appeal.

Boundaries.

«All properties inscribed on the World Heritage List must have adequate long-term legislative, regulatory, institutional and/or traditional protection and management to ensure their safeguarding. This protection should include adequately delineated boundaries. Similarly States Parties should demonstrate adequate protection at the national, regional, municipal, and/or traditional level for the nominated property. They should append appropriate texts to the nomination with a clear explanation of the way this protection operates to protect the property» (ix).

As a result of monitoring of the ancient settlement Talgar, performed by our organization (last visit on-site took place on February 25, 2016), the following facts were determined:

— most of the ancient settlement is fenced, but there is no fence on the north side of it, and the access to the ancient settlement is open to anybody (we found no guard on duty);
— informational display with a description of the monument indicating its status is placed only in one spot;
— access to the territory of the monument is not closed which creates a threat of its destruction.

Integrity of the site is damaged

As a result of the monitoring of the ancient settlement Talgar, performed by our organization (last visit on-site took place on February 25, 2016), the following facts were determined:
— part of the ancient settlement wall was destroyed in two spots from the northeast side of the settlement, as a result of archeological bore pits, as indicated in the material provided by the Ministry of Culture and Sports (x) (see the photo No.012 in the Attachment);
— apparently, the local residents continue to destroy the ancient city wall by digging out clay from the bore pits, which confirms unsatisfactory protection of the site (see the photo No.05, 06 in the Attachment);
— on the place of the partially demolished by restorers and archeologists ancient city wall and tower, a tower and part of the fortress wall were built using modern construction materials (see the photo No.07, 08 in the Attachment), which lead to a “significant loss of historical authenticity” of this part of the archeological site (xi);
— official sources do not provide information whether or not the Convention Committee was informed about this construction (in accordance with the point 172 of the Operational Guidelines) (xii).

Site pollution.

As a result of the monitoring of the ancient settlement Talgar, performed by our organization (last visit on-site took place on February 25, 2016), the following facts were determined:
— the territory of the ancient settlement is littered, judging by how it looks, the trash lays there since the fall 2015 (see the photo No.09, 10 in the Attachment);
— new trash appeared along the fence of the site (see the photo No.11 in the Attachment).

The public and the Ecological Society «Green Salvation» concerned by the condition of the ancient settlement Talgar, calls upon you with a request to take measures, within the powers given to you, to prevent further destruction of the ancient settlement Talgar and assure its preservation as the World Heritage Site.

Attachment
Photo 01. January 2015.
Photo 02. Summer 2015.
Photo 03, 04. February 2016.
Photo 05, 06. February 2016.
Photo 07, 08. October 2015, February 2016.
Photo 09, 10. October 2015, February 2016.
Photo 11. February 2016.
Photo 12. August 2015.

Chairperson of Ecological Society «Green Salvation»
Sergey Kuratov

March 15, 2016.

Pardon Us, World Heritage or Ecocide for Personal Gain

2015.05vesna-NasyrovAH2A3903Ecocide is the intentional, intensive destruction and pollution of the natural environment, creating the threat of environmental catastrophe. This is precise characterization of the situation in the Maly Almatinsky Canyon (alongside the City of Almaty), which has developed as a result of the lack of consistent policies to protect the Republic of Kazakhstan’s most valuable natural territories.

In order to preserve and restore the unique natural complexes of the Zailiisky Alatau, which hold great environmental, historical, scientific, esthetic and recreational value, the government of Kazakhstan adopted a decision to create the Ile-Alatau National Park (February 22, 1996, No. 228). Admittedly, no buffer zone was established around its border, and no procedures were established for removing outside land users from the park. But “Moscow was not built in a day”. The key was that the multiple-year efforts of specialists, scientists and the public to create the park were successful and it seemed that there was a real possibility to steadfastly protect nature’s beauty and wealth… but, as is well known, “the road to hell is paved with good intentions”.

In just two years time, by the Presidential Decree “On Changes to the Border of the City of Almaty” (April 29, 1998, No. 3929), 57.9 hectares of the Ile-Alatau National Park in the Maly Almatinsky Canyon were transferred to the city’s administrative jurisdiction. These lands did not lose their status as an environmentally protected territory of national significance. Thus, on the surface, it appeared that this decree was adopted in order to establish the optimal administrative management scenario. Only later did the true meaning of these metamorphoses become clear.

On October 1, 1999, the Akim of Almaty City made the decision to create the Medeu Natural Park in order to preserve the particular environmental, recreational and scientific value of the Medeu Hollow and to decrease pollution and the human footprint on its territory (October 1, 1999, № 906). A clever basis for this action was presented: “The creation of Medeu Park is a measure aimed at protecting the Ile-Alatau National Park from its excessive recreational burden, by redirecting the recreational barrage away from the true natural territories…” (Natural-Scientific Grounds…, p. 144). Had they remembered about the national park’s buffer zone? No, it had never been established. According to the plans, Medeu Park should function as the buffer zone for the Ile-Alatau National Park in the Maly Almatinsky Canyon, created on the city’s territory and a narrow strip wedged in the Ile-Alatau National Park.

On January 31, 2000, the plan to create Medeu Park was discussed at а public hearing. Specialists from Kazgiproleskhoz, Lesproekta*, leaders from the Ile-Alatau State National Natural Park and NGO representatives (including the Ecological Society “Green Salvation”) expressed negative attitudes towards the idea of its creation. They stated that the organization of such a structure was inadvisable, as it would lead to an increasing human footprint on the territory of the national park, as well as to a reduction in the effectiveness of environmental protection measures in the Medeu Hollow as a whole.

Public concerns grew after the results became known of work by a joint panel from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection, and the General Public Prosecutor regarding compliance with the legality of Specially Protected Natural Territories (Reference and Resolution…). The panel acknowledged numerous cases of legislative violations, including those in the Ile-Alatau National Park.

Concerned with the deteriorating situation in the Medeu Hollow, the public tried to draw the attention of the country’s leadership to the problem. In September 2000, participants in the Second Ecological Forum of Nongovernmental Organizations of Kazakhstan appealed to the President, members of Parliament, and the Minister of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection to halt the destruction of the territorial and environmental value of the Ile-Alatau National Park (Appeal…). The public received even more weighty arguments for protecting the park when, in December 2000, the park was included in a tentative list of sites nominated by the Republic of Kazakhstan for the List of the Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage (Meeting Decisions…).

Responding to the public appeal, in February 2001, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection also expressed opposition to the creation of Medeu Park (Response from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection No. 03-05-10/507). “In fact, it is envisaged that [Medeu] Park will include the buffer zone of the Ile-Alatau State National Nature Park and the protected forests around the river beds of the Malay Almatinka and Butakovka, in which, under powerful human influences, there are now growing sparse, diseased plantings of Sivers apple trees, apricots, Karkas Kavkazsky trees (Celtis caucasica) and 14 other ancient types of plants included in Kazakhstan’s Red Book… The creation of a city park on the border of a national park and its buffer zone will have extremely negative consequences… Considering the aforementioned, the Republic of Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection considers the creation of the city’s Medeu Nature Park to be unnecessary”. The Ministry did not approve the conclusion of the project’s environmental assessment, conducted by the Almaty City Territorial Department on Environmental Protection (Response from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection No. 03-05-10/507). Nevertheless, the park was created. And it included a portion of the Ile-Alatau National Park—a Specially Protected Natural Territory of a higher level. Such a decision could only have been made by native bureaucrats.

Almost simultaneous to the creation of Medeu Park, chaotic construction of private cottages began on the park’s territory. Wild, fertile forests began to be cut down, water storage areas began to be built, the rivers and their banks became covered in waste, mighty fences were erected, and the inscription “Private Property” began to appear…along with armed guards!

Visitors to Medeu Park are greeted by a sign at the entrance with dual meaning: “Nature is in Our Hands!” Certainly, the basic idea behind the park’s creation lies in this slogan—to privatize, or more simply, to steal the territory of the hollow, which is now at the disposal of Almaty’s Akimat.

Despite the negative conclusion from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection, in 2001, under the suitable pretext of “executing the ‘Complex Program for the Development and Arrangement of Specially Protected Natural Territories of the Republic of Kazakhstan until 2030’ and for the purposes of preserving and renewing the unique natural complexes” of the Zailiisky Alatau, the City Akimat renamed the state establishment “Medeu” to the State Natural Park “Medeu” and gave it the state of an environmentally protected establishment! (December 10, 2001, No.3/332). This is not the normal course of things in our homeland!

Subsequent events may be briefly described as an interdepartmental battle for the long tenge, or rather the long dollar, the victor of which emerged…the Akimat.

On February 6, 2002, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection continued to insist that the “decision of the Almaty City Akim to create the State Natural Park ‘Medeu’ was made in violation of norms established by the legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan, and is subject to repeal via established procedures” (Response from the Ministry, No.02-05-10/375).

Nevertheless, on July 15, 2002, a government decision was issued “On Converting Individual Portions of Specially Protected Natural Territories to Different Land Categories” (July 15, 2002, No. 780), including land from the Ile-Alatau National Park.

In January 2003, the Almaty Akimat was forced to acknowledge that the situation in the natural territory was continuing to deteriorate: the stream of automobile traffic was increasing, private construction was continuing, and the problems of water storage and drainage remained unresolved.

Alas the specialists and the public turned out to be right. Converting a portion of the land from a national park to an administrative jurisdiction of the city and creating Medeu Park not only did not foster the improvement of the environmental situation in the natural territory, but rather made it worse. And what sort of way out did the Akimat suggest?

The Akimat adopted the decision entitled “On Measures to Improve the Environmental Situation in the Medeu State Nature Park and the Chimbulak Mountain Skiing Complex” (January 24, 2003, No. 1/41). Among other things, this decision speaks about the construction of aerial tramways and multi-tiered parking garages for thousands of vehicles as one of the means to improve the environmental situation!?

From all appearances, the Akimat’s decision was strengthened by weighty arguments that convinced even the Ministry of Environmental Protection (formerly the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection). On August 20, 2003, the Ministry replied to a public inquiry that, in accordance with Article 41 of the 1997 law “On Specially Protected Natural Territories”, a state nature park is analogous to a national state nature park, holding the very same tasks and fulfilling the same functions. The difference lies only in that it is a specially protected territory of local significance! The bureaucrats at the Ministry of Environmental Protection were not able to come up with any other arguments. “Considering that the Natural Territory is also a Specially Protected Natural Territory, and its status is analogous to the status of the Ile-Alatau National Nature Park, we consider that the seizure of land from the latter meets the requirements of active legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan” (Ministry of Environmental Protection response No. 02-05-07/4061). But why not do the opposite? That is, convert the land into a national park under the aegis of a central authorized body, ensuring more reliable protection for the territory?

In the conclusion of the letter, it is stated that the “Ministry ensures that continual government control will be exercised over the observation of the environmental protection regime on the territory of the establishment”. It is possible that control was ensured. But legality? No! On more than one later occasion, the Minister of Environmental Protection, A.S. Samakova, hopelessly threw up her hands, calling for the restoration of order to the Medeu Hollow.

In February 2004, six and a half years after the 1997 adoption of the law “On Specially Protected Natural Territories”, a government decision was passed (February 27, 2004, No. 240), defining the procedures for the demolition of buildings, structures and objects located within Specially Protected Natural Territories. To date, there has been no information about the “demolition” of anything from the given parks. But then the list of architectural “masterpieces” erected in their borders is several dozen pages long.

And the fate of the decision itself was unenviable. On November 7, 2006, it was repealed by a new government decision “On Establishing Regulations for Providing for the Rental [!] of Land Portions on the Territories of National State Nature Parks in Order to Realize Regulated Tourism and Recreation” (No. 1063). Since then, the question of demolishing objects and structures is no longer raised, and construction in the parks is proceeding at full speed.

Finally, the President tried to resolve the issue by applying procedures to Medeu Hollow. On June 11, 2004, a Presidential Directive was issued entitled “On Measures to Preserve the Unique and Rare Landscapes on the Territory of the Republic of Kazakhstan” (No. 474). In this directive, it is written in black and white that “The government of the Republic of Kazakhstan…over a three-month period reviewed the issue of assigning the status of an object of state natural-zapovednik fund** of republic-wide significance to the territory of the Shchuchinsko-Borovsky Recreational Zone, and the Medeu and Shymbulak Hollows, and will ensure their preservation by means of establishing prohibitions and limits to economic activity on these territories…”. So all the same, it was more correct to convert the lands into the disposal of a national park!?

But what was the President’s Directive to Almaty’s Akimat? A simple sound, and nothing more! Therefore, it was simply ignored, the government kept silent, and everything returned back to how it was.

In 2005, the issue was taken up by the Environmental Public Prosecutor of the City of Almaty. She conducted a compliance verification with environmental protection legislation on the territory of Medeu Park (Response from the Public Prosecutor No. 37-05). Yet one more attempt by our environmental protection authorities, government and Presidents at constancy. And it resulted in regular reports and tabulations of violations and destruction, but anything involving the Akimat is like water off a duck’s back.

At the end of 2006, the Almaty Akim, having fully come to believe in his impunity, declared a true war on the nature of Medeu Park and the Ile-Alatau National Park. Let’s develop the Medeu Hollow! Let’s build parking lots, trade/entertainment centers, restaurants, bars, nightclubs…! The latter, clearly, are utterly essential for the preservation and restoration of the unique natural complexes of the Zailiisky Alatau! And next up is the Kokzhailau Hollow, and then the next place, and then the next. And what about the world heritage? There is world heritage here, where one’s head spins from the smell of greasy dollars.

And again everything is decided under the cover of good intentions. The initiators of a new project announced that they intended to put an end to the violations of legality and to establish order at the Medeu Hollow. “On the whole, it is anticipated that the project to reconstruct and develop the Medeu and Shymbulak Resorts [Author’s note: Not Specially Protected Natural Territories, but resorts!] will have a long-term positive impact on Kazakhstan’s economy and will become an example of realizing a strategy of sustainable development of a community with viable infrastructure and the corresponding services and maintenance resources” (Project to Reconstruct…, p. 4).

A recent legend, but one that is difficult to believe! In late April 2007, without a positive conclusion from environmental assessments, and even without the completion of an environmental impact assessment, and without the agreement of the parks administration, the companies began construction of an aerial tramway. And they began by cutting down Tien-Shan Spruce, digging out hollows and, as in the good old pre-environmental times, dumping the soil down a slope into a river.

And, finally, the last point in this history. To bring cynicism to the brim, the National Commission of the Republic of Kazakhstan on UNESCO and the Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (ISESCO) is headed by the Akim of Almaty City! The Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage was developed and signed in 1972, under the initiative of UNESCO. Kazakhstan signed the convention in 1994––13 years ago! But as of yet not one natural object of Kazakhstan has been included in the World Heritage List! In July 2007, the Ministry of Environmental Protection conducted a sub-regional seminar on preparing the nomination for the “Western Tien-Shan”. And the nomination of the Ile-Alatau National Park has been postponed for an indefinite time. It “is distinguished by universal value from a scientific point of view,” and “natural beauty”, obviously, no longer interests anyone (The Convention…, article 2).

The multiple facts of violations and noncompliance with the law “On Specially Protected Natural Territories” in Medeu Park and the Ile-Alatau National Park speak not simply to the inactivity of local bodies of power and the authorized environmental protection authorities. They attest to the paralysis of state power, which is a result of ever growing corruption.

In our opinion, the only way out of this growingly complicated situation is to restore legality and order. Only then can ecocide come to a halt.

***

Notes

* Kazgiproleskhoz is a specialized state organization that plans the forestry economy. Lesproekta is a specialized state organization that studies and inventories forests.

** Objects assigned to the state natural-zapovednik fund are natural objects, including natural territories, animals and vegetation, that require very strict conservation measures and may not be used for economic activities.

References (in Russian)

Appeal from the participants of the Second Environmental Forum of Nongovernmental Organizations of Kazakhstan to the President, members of Parliament, and the Minister of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection. September 28, 2000.
Decision by the Akimat of Almaty Сity from December 10, 2001 “On the Medeu State Nature Park” (No. 3/332).
Decision by the Akimat of Almaty City from January 24, 2003 “On Measures to Improve the Environmental Situation in the Medeu State Nature Park and the Chimbulak Mountain Skiing Complex” (No. 1/41).
Decision by the Almaty City Akim from October 1, 1999 “On Questions Regarding the Organization of Medeu Nature Park” (No. 906).
Decision by the government of the Republic of Kazakhstan from February 22, 1996 “On the Creation of the Ile-Alatau National State Nature Park in Almaty Oblast” (No. 228).
Decision by the government of the Republic of Kazakhstan from July 15, 2002 “On Converting Individual Portions of Specially Protected Natural Territories into Lands of Other Categories” (No. 780).
Decision by the government of the Republic of Kazakhstan from February 27, 2004 “On Establishing Regulations for the Seizure (Purchase) of Land Plots for the Creation and Extension of Specially Protected Natural Territories from Land of All Categories, and the Demolition and Taking Away of Buildings, Structures and Objects on Specially Protected Natural Territories, and Providing for the Rental of Land Portions, Buildings and Structures on Specially Protected Natural Territories for Scientific, Tourist and Recreational Activities” (No. 240).
Decision by the government of Kazakhstan from November 7, 2006 “On Establishing Regulations for Providing for the Rental of Land Portions on the Territories of National State Nature Parks in Order to Realize Regulated Tourism and Recreation” (No. 1063).
Decision from the December 25, 2000 meeting of the Working Group on Including Natural Objects in the Republic of Kazakhstan in the UNESCO List of World Cultural and Heritage Sites (No. 1)
Decree from the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan from April 29, 1998 “On Changing the Borders of the City of Almaty” (No. 3939).
The Natural, Scientific Basis for Establishing the Medeu State Nature Park. Explanatory Notes. Almaty, 2000.
Order from the Chair of the Forestry, Fishing and Game Committee of the Republic of Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection from January 23, 2002 “On Measures to Preserve the Mountain Forests of Almaty’s Oblast’s Zailiisky and Dzhungarsky Alatau” (No. 7).
Presidential Directive entitled “On Measures to Preserve the Unique and Rare Landscapes on the Territory of the Republic of Kazakhstan” from June 11, 2004, (No. 474).
Project to Reconstruct the Medeu and Shymbulak Resorts. Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA). Executive Summary. – Almaty, 2007.
Reference and Resolution from the Panel of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection and the General Public Prosecutor of the Republic of Kazakhstan on the Question of Ensuring Legality in Specially Protected Natural Territories (abridged version). –Kokshetau, August 26, 2000.
Response from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection No. 03-05-10/507 from February 23, 2001 to a public appeal.
Response from the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection No. 02-05-10/375 from February 6, 2002 to a public appeal.
Response from the Ministry of Environmental Protection No. 02-05-07/4061 from August 20, 2003 to an inquiry from the Ecological Society “Green Salvation” dated July 10, 2003 (No. 028).
Response from the Specialized Environmental Protection Prosecutor of the City of Almaty No. 37-05 from March 24, 2005 to an inquiry from the Ecological Society “Green Salvation” dated February 21, 2005 (No. 012).

Ecological Society “Green Salvation”

January 22, 2008

Translated by Michelle Kinman.