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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Many Topics Including The Oldest Dinar Community. Copyright © 2006-2020


    Will the "Environment" succeed in stopping dredging?

    Rocky
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    Will the "Environment" succeed in stopping dredging? Empty Will the "Environment" succeed in stopping dredging?

    Post by Rocky Sat 10 Aug 2024, 4:40 am

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    [size=52]Will the "Environment" succeed in stopping dredging?[/size]

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    2024-08-08
    The Ministry of Environment’s talk about implementing strict measures to bulldoze orchards and cut down trees was welcomed by environmental activists and local officials, who stated that this step, although late, could serve as a deterrent to violators.[/size]
    [size=45]Residential encroachment is sweeping away thousands of acres of agricultural land in Iraq, in addition to the fact that tree cutting is often carried out by government departments under the pretext of developing streets and reducing traffic congestion.[/size]
    [size=45]Ahmed Hamdan, a member of the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Gathering, said in an interview with “Al-Alam Al-Jadeed”: “We support the Ministry of Environment in taking any action that would improve the environment. This statement, which was issued recently, comes late, as it has been long awaited by many activists in this field and environmental organizations.”[/size]
    [size=45]The spokesman for the Ministry of Environment, Louay Sadiq Al-Mukhtar, said yesterday, Wednesday, that the ministry seeks to implement strict measures to prevent the uprooting of trees, orchards and agricultural lands, the most important of which is what was included in the Environmental Protection and Improvement Law No. 27 of 2009, noting that in each governorate there is a council for the protection and improvement of the environment headed by the governor, and there is a federal or federal council for the protection and improvement of the environment headed by the Minister of Environment.[/size]
    [size=45]Hamdan added, “Such deterrent measures would stop the destruction of orchards and green spaces on the outskirts of cities and rural areas, in order to create green spaces that preserve the environment and biodiversity, which is what all environmental activists seek.”[/size]
    [size=45]He hopes that all concerned ministries and governorates will “support this measure to stop the bulldozing and find solutions to the residential encroachment on agricultural lands by relying on vertical construction and using open spaces rather than agricultural ones. We also ask all concerned to plant other trees to increase the vegetation and tree cover in the country.”[/size]
    [size=45]It is noteworthy that the Baghdad Municipality decided last year to impose a fine of 5 million dinars on anyone who cuts down a tree, and formed a monitoring cell in all regions.[/size]
    [size=45]The lack of green spaces has begun to have environmental and health effects in Iraq, as the country ranked second as the worst polluted country after the African country of Chad. In a previous report by “Al-Alam Al-Jadeed”, environmental specialists attributed this to the high emissions and exhausts of cars and the lack of a green belt. They called for a shift to public transportation and clean energy, and forcing owners of generators and factories to filter the gases emitted from them, amid an increase in cases of asthma, chronic chest diseases, and cancer.[/size]
    [size=45]For his part, the Director of Babylon Environment, Maki Al-Shammari, indicated during an interview with “Al-Alam Al-Jadeed” that “the Babylon Environment Directorate is keen to address desertification despite its worsening rates, and we do not grant any approval for construction on agricultural lands except after the approval of the Ministry of Agriculture.”[/size]
    [size=45]In this regard, Al-Shammari added, “Our directorate has taken two directions in this regard. The first is to activate the Environmental Protection and Improvement Law and pursue violators in order to apply prison sentences and fines. We have filed more than one complaint to the judiciary against violators, the last of which was against people who cut down 7 old trees in Al-Mahawil District, north of the governorate.”[/size]
    [size=45]The Director of Babylon Environment continues, “The second trend is to request departments that are working on establishing projects and renovating roads to oblige them to include a percentage of afforestation in the projects and for the municipalities to take care of the trees. This matter will be followed up through the Environmental Protection Council headed by the governor.”[/size]
    [size=45]In 2020, the Ministry of Agriculture announced that Iraq needed more than 14 billion trees to revive areas suffering from desertification, in addition to launching a project based on distributing saplings to municipalities in Baghdad, governorates, and civil society organizations for free to plant them inside and around cities to support the green belt to prevent the desert from encroaching on cities.[/size]
    [size=45]The Arab region as a whole suffers from the negative effects of climate change. In Iraq, the rate of desertification in irrigated lands is about 71 percent, as water levels have declined significantly, most notably the Euphrates River, whose drought has affected Anbar Governorate, the marshes, and the southern governorates.[/size]
    [size=45]In addition, legal researcher Haider Al-Shammari confirmed, during an interview with “Al-Alam Al-Jadeed”, that “many laws and decisions that protect the environment exist, but their failure to be implemented is what is regrettable, especially since most of the violations against trees and agricultural lands are either due to deliberate government measures, or due to negligence and lack of oversight.”[/size]
    [size=45]In a reading of the Environmental Protection and Improvement Law No. (27) of 2009, he points out that “Article 18 of this law prohibits the cutting of old trees in public areas within cities except with permission from the head of the Environmental Protection and Improvement Council in the governorate,” noting that the law “defined old trees as those whose age reaches (30) thirty years or more, but this is a legislative shortcoming, as trees of a younger age should not be cut down either.”[/size]
    [size=45]Al-Shammari added, “The law also prohibits cutting down forest trees except after obtaining the approval of the authorities concerned with granting licenses based on knowledge of the annual production per dunum,” noting that “anyone who violates the provisions of this law shall be punished with imprisonment for three months, or a fine of one to twenty million dinars, or both penalties.”[/size]
    [size=45]He stated that “the law also allocated rewards in Article 31, which gave the minister the right to grant rewards to persons who carry out work or projects that would protect and improve the environment, the amount of which and how to disburse it shall be determined by instructions issued by him in accordance with the law.”[/size]
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