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06 December 2001
Toepfer Cites Need to Assess Afghan EnvironmentReleases statement following U.N.-sponsored talks in BonnKlaus Toepfer, executive director of the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), says the package being considered by governments for the rehabilitation of Afghanistan should include a thorough environmental assessment of the country. According to a December 6 press release, Toepfer issued a statement following the U.N.-sponsored talks on Afghanistan in Bonn, Germany. Toepfer asserted that the armed conflict waged in Afghanistan for the last 20 years may have led to environmental degradation in areas such as freshwater, sanitation, forests and soil quality. "People cannot secure real and sustainable economic development against a background of contaminated water, polluted land and marginalized natural resources," he said. Toepfer said that UNEP, working with the U.N. Office for Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA), could be in the forefront of efforts to mobilize the resources and administration needed for the environmental rehabilitation to come. He said the first step is to dispatch a mission to the region to pinpoint areas in Afghanistan where environmental degradation has occurred and where a more in-depth assessment is needed. Findings from this field mission would give the international community a clear picture of where cleanup and other actions aimed at restoring the Afghan environment are needed. Following is the text of the press release: United Nations Environment ProgramReconstructing War Torn Afghanistan Must Take Environment Into Account Environmental issues should form part of the package being considered by Governments for the rehabilitation of Afghanistan, Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Program, said today. Nairobi, 6 December 2001 - Mr Toepfer said: "Armed conflict, which has been waged in Afghanistan for at least 20 years, can lead to environmental degradation in areas such as freshwater, sanitation, forests and soil quality". In a statement, issued in the wake of the United Nations-sponsored talks on Afghanistan which ended in Bonn, Germany, this week, he called for those involved to consider the need for a thorough environmental assessment of the country. "A healthy environment is a prerequisite for sound and sustainable development. People cannot secure real and sustainable economic development, against a background of contaminated water, polluted land and marginalized, natural resources," he said. Mr Toepfer said it was vital that the humanitarian needs of the Afghan people are first secured and that an interim government is in place. But added that UNEP stood ready to assist in the rehabilitation and reconstruction phase to come. "Focused consideration must soon be given to the environmental impacts of the current and previous wars. There is also a need to assess the environmental impact from mass migration both within the country and into neighboring ones. UNEP's recently established, Post-Conflict Assessment Unit, based in Geneva can extend their work to Afghanistan. This work was pioneered in the Balkans following the Kosovo conflict," he said. UNEP has worked and cooperated with the United Nations Office for Coordination for Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) who are already operating in the region. It believes that the two organizations could be in the forefront of efforts to mobilize the resources and administration needed to tackle environmental questions in Afghanistan. Mr Toepfer said the first action was to dispatch a mission to the region to pin point those areas in Afghanistan where environmental degradation has occurred and where a more in-depth assessment is needed. This would build on current desk-top studies that are being carried out by UNEP in consultation with other UN agencies and environmental organizations. It is hoped that the findings from the on the ground mission will in turn give the international community a clear picture of where clean up and other actions aimed at restoring the Afghan environment are needed. |
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