Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 14 – “Today, the Aral
does not exist as a sea” because it has “lost is economic, ecological and
natural significance,” an Uzbek commentator says, and that sets the stage for conflicts
between the upstream countries of Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan which have enough
water and the downstream countries and especially Uzbekistan which do not.
In an impassioned article on this
development on the Centrasia.ru portal, Nurlan Abdiyev argues that the death of
the Aral – and he suggests it is unlikely to be stopped before that body of
water completely disappears – will have the most severe consequences for “the
more than 50 million people of Central Asia” (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1371053640).
Abdiyev details the ways in which the development
of agriculture and the growth of population in the region led countries through
which the Amudarya and Syrdarya rivers flow to withdraw ever more water from
them, thereby “leaving the Aral Sea without an inflow and condemning it to
drying up.”
As someone who “lives and works in the lower
reaches of the Amudarya,” Abdiyev says, he sees every day the ecological and
human consequences in that region that are the result. But he warns that those
who live upstream in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan must not assume that they will
escape the death of the Aral.
That the environment and economy of those who live
in downstream countries will suffer first is beyond question, he continues.
They are already suffering. Karakalpakia, he notes, is registering annual
losses in agriculture as a result of water shortages amount to 150 million US
dollars. And the human costs are much
higher still.
But upstream countries, who currently believe they
can divert water for energy and irrigation projects, have to recognize that the
problems of their downstream neighbors will ultimately affect them directly as their
populations grow and indirectly as their downstream neighbors react to what the
others are doing.
If the upstream countries do not understand that,
then, water problems are going to become “the basis for tensions in the relations
among the countries of Central Asia,” especially if each country continues to
approach the issue from the narrow perspective of its immediate national
interests rather than long-term regional ones.
And if the current trends continue, the Aral will “completely
disappear,” agricultural production across the region will fall, and
governments will be forced to take measures to try to defend the needs of their
respective populations, thus further exacerbating what is already a tragic
situation.
The Central Asian countries must reach a balanced
agreement soon to save the situation and prevent its deterioration into a
political crisis. But so far, Abdiyev says, they have been unable to agree to
proceed according to the provisions of International Water Law, which require
that upstream countries must consider the interests of downstream water users.
Instead, the upstream countries in Central Asia
have striven “by any means” to promote their interests regardless of what
happens to the others. That development,
he concludes, will spark ever moreintense “international water and energy
conflicts” among countries in a region that should be committed to securing a
common future.
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