Lethbridge Herald

Protesters demand stop to logging

PRIMEVAL FOREST THE LAST IN EUROPE

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — WARSAW, POLAND

Hundreds marched in Warsaw on Saturday to protest widespread logging in Europe’s last primeval forest, a project undertaken by Poland’s conservati­ve government.

The ruling Law and Justice party has allowed increased logging in the Bialowieza Forest, a vast woodland that straddles Poland and Belarus, alarming environmen­talists who say it threatens a natural treasure. The forest has been designed a UNESCO World Heritage site.

The government says it has increased logging to fight an outbreak of bark beetle, which has infected many spruce trees. But ecologists see that as a pretext to increase timber production for profit, saying authoritie­s have been felling not only infected trees but also healthy ones, some 100 years old. Young trees are to be planted in their place.

Speakers at the rally organized by Greenpeace and other groups said they want the entire forest to be declared a national park to ensure its protection. They fear the virgin forest, home to a complex ecosystem of bison, woodpecker­s and many other species, is being transforme­d into what will be essentiall­y a tree plantation.

Robert Cyglicki, director of Greenpeace in Poland, called the logging “a crime against our heritage.”

Protesters rallied in central Warsaw and then marched to the Environmen­t Ministry.

Currently only the forest’s core is protected as a national park on the Polish side.

The march came several days after Environmen­t Minister Jan Szyszko called for Bialowieza to lose its UNESCO natural heritage status.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Protesters march demanding a stop to massive logging in the Bialowieza forest, one of Europe's last virgin woodlands, in Warsaw, Poland, Saturday.
Associated Press photo Protesters march demanding a stop to massive logging in the Bialowieza forest, one of Europe's last virgin woodlands, in Warsaw, Poland, Saturday.

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