Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Pakistan's Arabian Sea islands risk environmen­tal disaster

-

Pakistan's federal government is planning to build modern cities on the Bundal and Dingi islands, which could ease pressure on Karachi, the country's financial hub. Experts say it would be an ecological catastroph­e.

The government's decision to establish the Pakistan Islands Developmen­t Authority and bring the Bundal and Dingi islands off the Karachi coast under federal authority shocked Majeed Motani, a 70-year-old fisherman.

"Our forefather­s came to these islands centuries ago. Now, the government is trying to occupy them. It is a threat not only to our livelihood­s but also to the island mangroves," Motani told DW.

Experts say the mangroves along the uninhabite­d islands are crucial to the environmen­tal protection of Karachi, Pakistan's most-populous city and financial hub.

Bundal Island in the Arabian Sea is part of the Indus Delta region, which is protected under the internatio­nal Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. It is already facing multiple threats – increasing air and water pollution, rising sea level, exploitati­on of resources, hunting, and habitat loss.

Moreover, Prime Minister Imran Khan said in September he wanted to turn these islands into mammoth real-estate projects, with a proposed investment of $50 billion (€41 billion) that would also help create 150,000 jobs. The proposed project aims to ease the urbanizati­on pressure on Karachi, a city of more than 20 million people.

DW has seen a Maritime Affairs Ministry tender notice, which seeks proposals from national and internatio­nal firms for the urban developmen­t project.

Environmen­talists and leaders of the provincial Sindh government are opposed to the Bundal Island "New Dubai" housing project.

"The federal government issued an unconstitu­tional ordinance. The Sindh government will resist it for the sake of our envi

ronment and our people," Murtaza Wahab, a spokespers­on for the provincial government, told DW.

Ali Haider Zaidi, the federal minister for maritime affairs, and Malik Amin Aslam, the federal minister for climate change, did not respond to DW's request for a comment.

Diminishin­g mangroves

Environmen­talists say that coastal mangroves help minimize the risk of natural disasters, including urban flooding, and work as natural barriers to avoid tsunamis. For decades, Pakistani authoritie­s have neglected these small islands off the coast of Karachi.

"I have been filming the biodiversi­ty on these islands for many years. A short boat ride from the mainland will take you to oncepristi­ne mangrove forests, which are now in a terrible shape. Tree stumps dot the shores, with mud crabs clinging to the remnants of the once mighty mangrove," Mahera Omar, a Karachi-based filmmaker who covers environmen­tal stories, told DW.

"At this rate of habitat loss, several of Karachi's marine species are at risk of extinction," she added.

Arif Belgaumi, an architect and town planner, slammed the government's island housing plan, saying a constructi­on of the scale that is being proposed for the Bundal Island Project will destroy the mangroves there.

"It will also cause a tremendous environmen­tal damage to the seabed. Also, the housing project will involve constructi­on of roads, shorelines, bridges and other concrete infrastruc­ture. It will pollute the area and damage the island's natural environmen­t," he told DW

ivelihood at stake

The fishing community is worried that the developmen­t of these islands could threaten their livelihood.

"The developmen­t of these islands will displace at least 2.5 million fishermen and their families," Mohammad Ali Shah, the founder of the Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum (PFF), told DW.

"We have been protesting

against the proposal since the government came up with it. We will not allow anyone to exploit our resources. We will go to court if the government starts illegal constructi­on on these islands," Shah added.

Osama Malik, an Islamabadb­ased legal expert, urges the Pakistani government to fulfill its duties under the Internatio­nal Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, and the ILO Convention 107 on Indigenous and Tribal Population­s. "The convention­s require Pakistan to respect the economic and cultural rights of the indigenous fisherfolk, who for centuries have earned their living around these two islands," Malik told DW.

Filmmaker Omar says the government needs to reconsider its island developmen­t plans as "new cities should not be an ecological nightmare for locals."

 ??  ?? The fishing community on the island is worried about its livelihood
The fishing community on the island is worried about its livelihood
 ??  ?? The government wants to turn the Bundal Island into a mammoth real-estate project
The government wants to turn the Bundal Island into a mammoth real-estate project

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany