Global News - December 2007
< Back to Global News
New development threatens unspoilt Moroccan coastline
Thu 13 December 2007 13:45 UK — Africa,Other
Local people have reacted angrily to Moroccan government plans to build a series of large scale tourist developments along unspoilt stretches of the country's African coastline.
A chain of resorts are planned, with construction on the first, being built by Spain's Fadesa, already underway in Saidia on Morocco's eastern edge, Reuters reported.
When work started last month, locals claimed the construction vehicles destroyed the remains of Morocco's last juniper forest, while others have stated the development is too near to a wetland visited by 200 species of birds.
"It's too close to the mouth of the river which has the richest ecosystem," Alaoui El Kebir of the United Nations Development Programme told the website.
Local environmental campaigner, Najib Bachiri, added: "We call them the destroyers. They dug up 6 km of dunes and killed thousands of tortoises just so you can see the sea from the cornice."
According to the European Environment Agency, seven of Morocco's 47 Mediterranean beaches have disappeared in recent years.
Help IAR rescue and rehabilitate endangered wildlife.
News brought to you by International Animal Rescue, leaders in wildlife rescue and rehabilitation.
< Back to Global News |
Read IAR News
Read IAR News >
|
June 2008 Update on IAR’s work in Indonesia As well as macaques and slow lorises, our team in Indonesia has ended the suffering of a number of endangered Javan gibbons living in misery in a centre known as Cikananga.
June 2008 IAR speaks out against the Great British Circus scandal International Animal Rescue is urging people to stay away from the Great British Circus during its visit to Tonbridge because it uses a variety of animals in its acts, including lions, tigers, camels and zebras.
|