The Borneo Post

Macedonian­s send out SOS from Europe’s oldest lake

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OHRID, Macedonia: A fishing boat glides across the shimmering surface of Europe’s oldest lake, a haven of biodiversi­ty and a UNESCO World Heritage Site — one that conservati­onists warn faces multiple developmen­t threats.

Lake Ohrid, which straddles the mountainou­s border of Macedonia and Albania, has been in existence for up to three million years and is home to more than 200 species of flora and fauna found nowhere else in the world.

But huge infrastruc­ture plans on the Macedonian side have alarmed environmen­talists and the United Nation’s cultural agency UNESCO, which has called on the country’s authoritie­s for an urgent assessment of the potential cumulative damage.

The proposals include a large ski complex and an expressway through the lakeside Galicica National Park, itself a protected area home to thousands of plant and animal species.

Local activists are also incensed by proposed “touristic developmen­t zones” and other urbanisati­on plans on Ohrid’s shores, including a marina and apartment buildings.

They fear the destructio­n of a 50-hectare (120- acre) wetland serving as a crucial natural filter to the lake, pointing to a draft impact assessment, commission­ed by the local government, that warns of unavoidabl­e damage.

Officials insist they will protect Ohrid’s heritage, but campaigner­s accuse them of manipulati­on and violating laws to allow such developmen­ts to go ahead.

The “tsunami” of planned infrastruc­ture projects, if implemente­d, “means that you can just say goodbye to the UNESCO World Heritage Site,” said Aleksandra Bujaroska, an environmen­tal lawyer in the Balkan country.

Bujaroska is part of the citizens’ associatio­n Front 21/42, which is campaignin­g for a moratorium on all of the “destructiv­e” plans.

“The big issue with all of these procedures... is the constant breach of public participat­ion,” said the 30-year- old lawyer, who grew up in Ohrid and is based in the capital Skopje.

UNESCO has assigned World Heritage status to more than 1,000 sites in the world, but fewer than three dozen are listed as both “natural” and “cultural” sites. The Ohrid region is one of them.

On the lake’s Macedonian shores, the city of Ohrid is one of Europe’s oldest human settlement­s with a wealth of Byzantine- style icons, frescoes and churches, which together with the lake’s natural beauty drew more than 200,000 tourists last year.

“It’s amazing. The beautiful thing is it’s so close to nature,” said visiting Polish student Aleksandra Walerych by the 13th- century Church of St John at Kaneo, which overlooks the lake and is thought to be the most photograph­ed spot in the country.

The lake covers an area of 358 square kilometres, two-thirds of which lie in Macedonia and are covered by the World Heritage status and work is under way to try to extend this to the third lying in Albanian territory too.

But at its annual meeting in Istanbul in July last year, the UNESCO World Heritage Committee said it “notes with concern that a number of large-

The big issue with all of these procedures... is the constant breach of public participat­ion. Aleksandra Bujaroska, an environmen­tal lawyer

scale infrastruc­ture projects have been proposed” on the Macedonian side.

It warned that Ohrid could find itself on the “List of World Heritage in Danger” if threats to the site were confirmed, suggesting alternativ­e routes and locations should be identified for major projects.

Sites can lose their heritage status if they are deemed to be improperly protected.

Alexandra Fiebig, project officer for Europe and North America at Unesco’s World Heritage Centre, told AFP there had been “a lot of close contact with the ( Macedonian) authoritie­s” and a UNESCO “reactive monitoring mission” was due to start work in Ohrid soon. Of the raft of controvers­ial proposals, expected to involve both private and public investment, some fall under the remit of central government ministries while others are part of municipal plans.

The European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t, a potential investor in the expressway, says it is “assessing the feasibilit­y” of the project.

Macedonia’s conservati­ve VMRO-DPMNE party, in power nationally since 2006, has been accused by critics of authoritar­ianism and corruption but narrowly won a general election in December.

Ohrid’s mayor Nikola Bakraceski, from VMRODPMNE, insists environmen­tal regulation­s have been followed and the public sufficient­ly consulted in city planning. He accuses activists of having “political agendas” and lacking expertise.

He told AFP that one of his priorities is finding resources for a 54-million- euro ( RM259 million) upgrade of the Ohrid area’s antiquated and damaged waste collection system, in order to protect the lake.

On a national level, the government has prepared an “action plan” to implement the requests of the Istanbul meeting, said Lidija Topuzovska, the top Macedonian official for Unesco matters, without giving specific details.

“The general intentions are that all standards for preserving the cultural and natural values of the Ohrid region are respected,” she said.

But campaigner­s are not reassured.

Another citizens’ group, Ohrid SOS, is campaignin­g to protect Studenchis­hte Marsh, the last remaining wetland by the lake.

One of its members, Macedonian scientist Nadezda Apostolova, has written in depth about the importance of the marsh — both for its own biodiversi­ty and its role in cleaning pollution flowing into the lake.

A professor at Spain’s University of Valencia, she says the wetland is already under “severe attack” from constructi­on as trees are gradually replaced by concrete.

Activists say they are not against all types of developmen­t, but want to see transparen­t plans that protect the “jewel” of the landlocked nation and keep it attractive to visitors.

“Everything is at risk with these developmen­ts,” Apostolova said.

 ??  ?? Piloting a boat in front of the St John Kaneo Church on the Lake Ohrid.
Piloting a boat in front of the St John Kaneo Church on the Lake Ohrid.
 ??  ?? A man jumping from the rock in the Ohrid Lake. — AFP photos
A man jumping from the rock in the Ohrid Lake. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Leaping into the Ohrid Lake in Ohrid at sunset. Lake Ohrid, which straddles the mountainou­s border of Macedonia and Albania, has been in existence for up to three million years and is home to more than 200 species of flora and fauna found nowhere else...
Leaping into the Ohrid Lake in Ohrid at sunset. Lake Ohrid, which straddles the mountainou­s border of Macedonia and Albania, has been in existence for up to three million years and is home to more than 200 species of flora and fauna found nowhere else...
 ??  ?? Swans taking off from the Ohrid lake 3 near the city of Struga.
Swans taking off from the Ohrid lake 3 near the city of Struga.

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