ACTION ALERT: UNESCO Sacrifices Wildlife Preserve for Uranium Mine

August 17th, 2012 - by admin

Rainforest Rescue – 2012-08-17 00:22:07

http://www.rainforest-rescue.org/mailalert/883?ref=nl&mt=1421

(August 9, 2012) — Selous is the largest Game Reserve in Africa and is inhabited by the most important populations of the critically endangered wild hunting dogs as well as East African elephants.

The UNESCO describes the Game Reserve as an immense sanctuary of 50,000 km2 which is “relatively undisturbed by human impact” and which is inhabited by “large numbers of elephants, black rhinoceroses, giraffes, hippopotamuses and crocodiles”. The reserve has a “variety of vegetation zones, ranging from dense thickets to open wooded grasslands.”

Nevertheless, the UNESCO has now accepted a boundary change of the Reserve and thus enabled the mining of uranium in the conservation area for supplying nuclear power plants. The planned mine is situated in an elephant corridor between Tanzania and Mozambique.

The UNESCO describes this unbelievable act as a “minor boundary change”. However, this means approximately 200 km2 that will no longer be part of the protected area.

Deadly Uranium Mining
Soon this unique landscape and biodiversity of could be exposed to an immense quantity radioactive waste. The planned operating time of ten years could lead to the creation of 60 million tons of highly poisonous waste. No safe method exists to avoid contamination of surface and ground water during uranium mining. It remains unclear whether the wind will spread radioactive dust into the Reserve and contaminate wide areas.

Environmental groups accuse the UNESCO of failure and irresponsibility. Their decision appears to be influenced by corporate and lobby interests. Now there is a risk that this case has set a precedent that endangers the protection of other World Heritage sites for similiar interests.

ACTiON: We must not let a World Heritage site be sacrificed. Please support this letter of protest to the UNESCO.

THE LETTER
To:
 Ms Irina Bokova, Director-general of UNESCO, i.bokova@unesco.org

Dear Ms Bokova,

the UNESCO has approved of a boundary change within the Selous Game Reserve. The decision makes way for a major uranium mine in this unique conservation area. Apparently, millions of tonnes of radioactive waste must be contained safely from the environment for thousands of years.

On top of that, uranium mining creates radioactive dust which will be spread with the wind into the Game Reserve. Most likely, rivers and groundwater in the region will be contaminated – for hundreds of years. I ask myself whether the members of the board are fully aware of the consequences.

The decision of the UNESCO appears to be influenced by corporate and lobby interests. Also, there is a high risk that the members of the UNESCO have set a precedent that endangers the protection of other World Heritage sites.
With the approval for the Selous Game Reserve Boundary Change, UNESCO violates their own principles as „protector“ of World Heritage sites and the culture of the indigenous people in East Africa.

I support the appeal of environmental groups who campaign for the withdrawal of the decision and demand the re-establishment of the Selous Game Reserve border defined in 1982. 
Furthermore I urge the government of Tanzania to withdraw the approval for uranium mining in close distance to the Selous Game Reserve.

Yours sincerely