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Adam Rogers, Senior Communications Advisor, UNDP 29 June 2009 Governments seek to avoid radioactive catastrophe in Central AsiaHigh-Level International Forum reaches unanimous agreement on joint declaration to consolidate efforts to resolve
problems of radioactive and toxic waste in the region Geneva - More than 100
high-level Central Asian country delegates and representatives from international organizations, donors, diplomatic corps
and other stakeholders met in Geneva today to develop concrete measures to address the challenge of radioactive waste in Central
Asia. Uranium tailing deposits left over from mining during the cold war in Kyrgystan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and
Tajikistan contain more than 800 million tons of radioactive and toxic waste.
Much of this waste sits in precarious ponds held back by unstable dams and alongside international rivers and watersheds.
Overstrained budgets and lack of capacity have prevented these countries from dealing adequately with the problem. UNDP organized
the Geneva conference as part of an attempt to identify viable solutions and to prevent an environmental catastrophe. UNDP
Administrator Helen Clark said the legacy of nuclear waste and related environmental management issues has a direct impact
on human development in the region. “As most of the uranium tailing sites are located in densely populated and natural-disaster
prone areas of Central Asia’s largest river basins, they represent a major potential risk to the region’s water supply and
the health of millions of people,” said Clark in a statement to the participants of the forum. “Many more are likely to suffer
if uranium contamination moves downstream to other areas.” Igor Chudinov, Prime Minister of the Kyrgyz Republic, said
his country adheres to the principles of nuclear non-proliferation. “The potential harm from uranium tailings in our countries
is a serious and dangerous threat that needs urgent attention. We need to develop security for our people and support their
human development.” UNDP Resident Representative and UN Coordinator Neal Walker said these tailings are not only highly
toxic and dangerous to human health, but they are extremely vulnerable to, for examples, earthquakes – which are inevitable
and only a matter of time. The dumps were not very well designed to begin with, and have been degrading over time. By leaving
them in their current state, we are playing Russian roulette with millions of human lives. “The governments of Central Asia
have come at a high level to affirm their commitment to a results-approach to resolving the problem together.” Miroslav
Jenca, Special Representative of the UN Secretary General to Central Asia, said although the forum was not a pledging conference,
it did yield several important results, including the creation of political and technical consensus among both Central Asian
governments and with major donors. “Several international organizations and donors expressed support for the initiative, including
UNDP, OSCE, the European Commission, EurAsEC, the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Governments of Canada, Finland,
Norway, Russia and others. We now have real momentum towards a multilateral approach to dealing with the problem.” Walker
said there were three definitive outcomes to the forum: “With the publicity around the event, we have generated important
public awareness of the problem and broad political support for the implementation of solutions,” said Walker. |
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