August 29, 2006
Central/South Asia: Deforestation Makes Mark On Region, Its People
by Antoine Blua
A forest fire in Iran's Golestan Province this month (Fars)
Prague, August 24, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- The destruction of forests in Central Asia, Iran, and Afghanistan is having a massive impact on the environment there. It is also affecting the lives of residents -- causing land degradation and erosion that lead to mudslides, landslides, and flooding. But efforts to raise public awareness and safeguard the future are under way.
Recent floods have left many communities in eastern Afghanistan severely damaged.
The flooding, caused by heavy rains and exacerbated by deforestation, has washed away homes, livestock, and farmland. United Nations' agencies report that at least 30 people have been killed and thousands left homeless.
The Asian Development Bank has estimated in 2004 that "traditional, noncommercial" energy sources -- such as wood -- supply around 85 percent of Afghanistan's energy needs, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. That requires widespread cutting of trees.
Environmentalists and other scientists stress that the deforestation problem should be viewed in a broad context -- both regionally and beyond its effect on plants and forest animals.
Esmail Kahrom is a professor of zoology and environmental science in neighboring Iran. He cites a cautionary tale from northern Iran to demonstrate that deforestation triggers a whole chain of events that can end in a human disaster.
"[In Iran] the most pressure has been on the forest in Elborz region," Kahrom says. "During the last 30 years, the area of forestation has been reduced to half. We are losing forests because of firewood and grazing animals. When you lose the forest, then the soil is exposed to the rain, to the sun, to the wind. Then the erosion starts, and, of course, after that desertification arises. And people lose their jobs, their animals, and more and more people rush into the big cities."
Tajik Trouble
In late April and early May, heavy rain and hail caused mudslides and floods in southern Tajikistan. Farmlands, more than 3,000 hectares of cotton plantations, and roads and bridges were damaged in the Khatlon region.
A mudslide blocks a major road in Tajikistan in the spring of 2004 (RFE/RL)
Saulius Smalys is environmental officer at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) center in Dushanbe. He tells RFE/RL that land degradation is one of the greatest threats in Tajikistan.A resident of the village of Arstanbap, in Kyrgyzstan's southern Jalal-Abad region, wants authorities to impose stricter measures to protect a unique walnut-fruit forest before it's too late. Villager Burulai Buzurmankulova says it's not just firewood collectors, either: Culprits include collectors of burls -- the smooth, knotty growths on trees -- who then sell them for decorative purposes.
The Arstanbap walnut forest is the largest natural growth walnut forest in the world (RFE/RL)
"The Arstanbap walnut forest is unique in the world. The air is pure; water is very clean," Buzurmankulova says. "This natural beauty is like a gift from god. [But] our people's attitude toward nature is not good, maybe because of their difficult lives. Some people use the forest for heating, [and] some people sell 100-, 150-, or 200-year-old burls. I'm disappointed with this. The government should control the situation as soon as possible; otherwise, our Arslanbap forest is in a grave danger."