Philippine Daily Inquirer

ISRAEL AND JORDAN AGREE TO CLEAN UP POLLUTED JORDAN RIVER

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SHARM EL SHEIKH, EGYPT— Israel and Jordan have agreed during a UN climate meeting in Egypt to clean up the polluted Jordan river, an essential waterway suffering under decades of pollution and drought.

The Memorandum of Understand­ing inked at the UN’s 27th Conference of Parties (COP27) stresses the need to rehabilita­te the river system which, experts say, has lost roughly half of its biodiversi­ty.

Israel’s environmen­tal protection minister, Tamar Zandberg, called the pact “an expression of the close relationsh­ip... between the two countries.”

“Cleaning up the hazards, restoring the flow of water and strengthen­ing the natural ecosystems of the Jordan River will... help us prepare for the climate crisis.”

Improving lives

Jordan’s Minister of Water and Irrigation Mohammed alNajjar voiced hope the accord would improve livelihood­s and provide “more water for residents on both banks of the Jordan River, including the Palestinia­ns,” according to a statement on the official Petra news agency.

Jordan is one of the world’s most water-deficient countries, suffering from extreme droughts, and water cooperatio­n with Israel long predates the 1994 peace deal between them.

Despite having diplomatic ties, Jordan and Israel have often had fraught relations, especially over Israeli policies toward the Palestinia­ns—tensions that have hindered environmen­tal cooperatio­n.

EcoPeace Middle East—a civil society group that works to promote environmen­tal cooperatio­n between Jordan, Israel and the Palestinia­ns—praised the deal, saying that “Jordan River rehabilita­tion is a critical climate adaptation.”

A cleaned up river can also offer jobs in tourism and to host pilgrimage­s as the river is “holy to half of humanity,” an EcoPeace statement said. Christians believe Jesus was baptized on the Jordan’s bank.

The Israel director for EcoPeace Middle East, Gidon Bromberg, stressed the need for followup action.

“The challenge ahead is to get the financing needed from the internatio­nal community, especially for Jordanians and Palestinia­ns to build the several sewage treatment plants and networks needed to get the sewage out of the river,” he told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? LONG AND WINDING END The Jordan River flows down several bends before pouring into the Dead Sea, near the West Bank city of Jericho.
—PHOTOS BY AFP LONG AND WINDING END The Jordan River flows down several bends before pouring into the Dead Sea, near the West Bank city of Jericho.
 ?? ?? NEAR THE SOURCE A photo taken on July 13, 2021, shows Israelis camping by the Jordan River near the Sea of Galilee, or Lake Tiberias, in Israel.
NEAR THE SOURCE A photo taken on July 13, 2021, shows Israelis camping by the Jordan River near the Sea of Galilee, or Lake Tiberias, in Israel.

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