The Korea Times

Cheorwon theme park threatens Korea’s largest crane habitat

- By Ko Dong-hwan aoshima11@koreatimes.co.kr

Environmen­tal activists have lodged an ecological destructio­n claim against Cheorwon County in Gangwon Province, claiming a theme park under constructi­on will affect the country’s largest redcrowned crane habitat and other endangered species.

The county government denied the accusation.

The Korea Federation for Environmen­tal Movements (KFEM) on June 23 criticized the historical tourism venue being built next to the ruins of the Cheorwon Korean Workers’ Party Headquarte­rs that had been on North Korean territory from 1946 until the Korean War. The venue in Sayo-ri is the centerpiec­e of a 70,000-square-meter park planned to contain pavilions exhibiting the village’s history — from the Japanese occupation to the post-war era and preserved local ecology near the inter-Korean border.

KFEM argued that the ongoing constructi­on that began in 2018 will threaten the region’s renowned red-crowned crane habitat near the border and leopard cats. Both are national treasures and endangered species. The group demanded the 18.7 billion won ($16 million) project be reconsider­ed.

The county ignored the annual wildlife mating season from March to June and continued constructi­on, the group said. KFEM also criticized the local government’s monorail project connecting the park to an observator­y on top of nearby Mount Soyo, because its noise will “obviously” affect wildlife in the area.

“For the Cheorwon government and local residents to live a mutually sustainabl­e life, the paddy fields that are the region’s precious assets have to be protected,” the KFEM said, mentioning that rice paddies are also important spots for cranes.

“Cranes coming to the fields during migration carries an internatio­nally significan­t meaning. That’s why the theme park must be reconsider­ed.”

KFEM also defended a local farmer who has been in a years-long legal fight with the county government over ownership of some farmland where the park is being built. The group said the authority “ignored the 87-year-old woman’s petition not to deprive her of her agricultur­al means of life and forced the constructi­on.”

“Rice paddies produce our food and surviving rights of that farmer must be protected,” the group said.

The Cheorwon government said KFEM’s report was written from a heavily biased view and branded it as a “lie.”

Lee Ji-won, the government’s tourism developmen­t division official who manages the constructi­on, told The Korea Times the county has abided by an environmen­tal impact assessment conducted in 2018. He said it basically allowed the Cheorwon government to proceed with constructi­on.

“If the environmen­tal report found something meaningful, it typically would advise us outright against any land developmen­t,” Lee said. “But the 2018 report didn’t advise us so.”

A small-scale environmen­tal impact assessment on the theme park’s site was done by the province’s Wonju Regional Environmen­tal

Office. It took the job instead of the Ministry of Environmen­t because of the project’s relatively small scale, Lee said.

The Korea Times acquired the report, which confirmed the presence of leopard cats after discoverin­g their excrement at the constructi­on site. The report also expressed concern the animals might appear at the site.

But instead of banning constructi­on, the report “recommende­d avoiding the mating season and minimizing environmen­tal impact by reducing particulat­e matter generated throughout the constructi­on.”

The report also concluded it was not necessary to halt the constructi­on to preserve the animals. “The animals, which seem to move around the site and nearby areas, will naturally avoid the physically sketchy scenes and detour to ecological­ly safer areas where they could be active,” it said.

The report showed the assessment and constructi­on were approved by Cheorwon County chief Lee Hyunjong.

Lee said Cheorwon has much wildlife — other than leopard cats and cranes — like boars and water deer, so the environmen­tal authority “cannot restrict land developmen­t projects every time there is an animal concern.”

“The Wonju environmen­tal office and the environmen­t ministry pay particular attention to the cranes in Cheorwon and, whenever there is any developmen­t project that might affect the birds’ habitats, they handle it carefully,” Lee said.

“But the ongoing theme park project raised no such concerns. The cranes aren’t spotted only at the human-designated habitats. They fly all over the county. If the activists want to protect them the way they insist, no land developmen­t should be allowed anywhere in the county, which is absurd.”

The county has often seen “ecological disturbanc­es” - as KFEM claims — including many outdoor events in front of the region’s symbolic Korean Workers’ Party Headquarte­rs, Lee said.

But he said there is no reason to abort the theme park, not even because of the current ecological status.

 ?? Korea Times file ?? Red-crowned cranes in Cheorwon.
Korea Times file Red-crowned cranes in Cheorwon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic