Turkey moves historic bath house to avoid looming flooding of town
TURKISH authorities yesterday conducted a hugely sensitive operation to move a centuriesold bath house weighing 1,600 tons to a new location to avoid being engulfed by floodwaters from a controversial dam project.
The Artuklu Hamam bath house in the southeastern town of Hasankeyf was loaded onto a wheeled platform and then moved down a specially constructed road to a new location in a process that took several hours.
Much of Hasankeyf will be under water or risk damage in the next few years because of the development of the Ilisu Dam project, which aims to drastically improve energy supplies for the Kurdish-dominated southeast.
The moving of the hamam, reportedly at least 650 years old, is the latest such transfer of a major historical building in the area to avoid being submerged.
In May 2017, Turkey moved the 15th century, 1,100-ton tomb of Zeynel Bey, a Turkic tribal leader, also on a special platform, to avoid being engulfed by the floodwaters.
Both historic buildings have been moved around 2 kilometers to an archeological park being set up just outside the town.
On the banks of the Tigris River, Hasankeyf is home to a cluster of sites from the Roman, Byzantine, pre-Ottoman and Ottoman eras.
Batman governor Ahmet Deniz told the state-run Anadolu news agency that the process of moving the objects was an example for the world.
“After the Artuklu Hamam, six more objects are going to be transferred. Hasankeyf will truly keep its historic identity,” he said. “The new Hasankeyf will be a center for tourism.”
But some local activists have expressed concerns that the unique character of the town is going to be lost forever.
The Initiative to Keep Hasankeyf Alive, an NGO created in 2006 to oppose the dam project, said it will “bring destruction and losses for our region and not be beneficial for the majority of the population.”
The Ilisu project, strongly backed by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has also caused tensions with neighboring Iraq which shares the Tigris river with Turkey and regards its waters as crucial for the arid regions where it flows.
Turkey’s ambassador to Iraq Fatih Yildiz announced in June that Ankara was putting the process of retention of water in the dam on hold, following complaints by Iraq of water shortages.
“We have shown again that was are able to put our neighbor’s needs above our own,” Yildiz said at the time.