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Ilisu Dam

Ilisu Dam on the Rocks

Financiers May Withdraw From Ilisu Dam

Stop Ilisu Slideshow Last year, the governments of Switzerland, Austria and Germany approved export guarantees for the controversial dam, provided that the Turkish government comply with 150 conditions on social and environmental concerns. A committee of experts was set up to monitor the implementation of these conditions. In early 2008, just before the planned start of construction, the expert team published a devastating review, which concluded that Turkish authorities ignored most of the project’s environmental and social conditions. In March, Federal minister Heidemarie Wieczoreck-Zeul said that Germany will "withdraw export guarantees if the agreed to measures are not applied." In April, government delegations from all three donor countries spent weeks in Turkey’s capital to encourage authorities to implement the conditions.

Will the Ilisu Dam Drown Out Western Credibility?

The ancient town of Hasankeyf will be flooded by the Ilisu Dam (peevishsoul)

The ancient town of Hasankeyf will be flooded by the Ilisu Dam (peevishsoul)

Governments and financial institutions have come under increasing pressure not to fund environmentally and socially destructive projects. In the case of the Chad-Cameroon Oil Pipeline, the Nam Theun 2 Dam in Laos and the Ilisu Dam in Turkey, the World Bank and Western governments have resorted to approving financial support under strict conditions. This approach has so far not worked because funders were not serious about enforcing their conditions. The Ilisu Dam is now facing a crunch. It may salvage the remaining credibility of Western donors – or drown it out completely. (Updated)

Protest Rallies Against Turkish Dam to be Held All Over Europe

WEED - Les Amis de la Terre - CRBM - AcquaSuAv - BankTrack

Ilisu Dam Critics Backed by Damning Expert Report

Nationwide Protests in Germany Against German Banks' Investment in Turkey’s Ilisu Dam

Contact: Ercan Ayboga, Heike Drillisch

Kurdish groups and NGOs organized demonstrations outside local branches of the German Sparkasse (Savings Bank) and Deka Bank in eleven German towns today. The protests are targeting the two banks financial support of the controversial Ilisu dam in south-eastern Turkey that will submerge the ancient city of Hasankeyf. Deka Bank alone is underwriting construction of the hydropower project with more than 100 Million Euros.

Protest Opens Global Dams Conference

Initiative to Keep Hasankeyf Alive – Fools of Munzur – Association for Conservation of Munzur Valley and Natural Life – Yusufeli Culture Association – WEED – International Rivers

Antalya, Turkey -- Dam-threatened people today demonstrated at a major dam-building conference in Turkey to call attention to major problems with Turkish dam development. Attendees at the organization’s annual world congress in Antalya, Turkey were met with a huge banner declaring "No development, but destruction by many dams in Turkey."

NGOs Denounce Funding for Turkey's Controversial Ilisu Dam

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German Government Export Credit Guarantee Condemned

The German government’s March 26 decision to grant an export credit guarantee for the Ilisu dam in southeast Turkey has prompted widespread criticism and condemnation from a number of human rights and environmental groups. "The German Government has sacrificed people, culture and the environment in order to enable companies to make a profit," argued Heike Drillisch of WEED, a German environmental and development organization. "The pro-Ilisu decision is a disgrace for Germany."

Land unter für deutschen Export

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Nichtregierungsorganisationen kritisieren Bürgschaftsbewilligung für türkischen Ilisu-Staudamm

Die soeben bekannt gegebene Entscheidung der Bundesregierung, eine Hermesbürgschaft für den Ilisu-Staudamm im Südosten der Türkei endgültig zu bewilligen, trifft auf massive Kritik von Nichtregierungsorganisationen.

"Die Bundesregierung opfert Menschen, Kultur und Umwelt, um einigen Unternehmen Gewinne zu ermöglichen", urteilt Heike Drillisch von der Umwelt- und Entwicklungsorganisation WEED. "Die Pro-Ilisu-Entscheidung ist eine Schande für Deutschland." Nach wie vor wurden die betroffene Bevölkerung und die gewählten Repräsentanten der umliegenden Gemeinden nicht angemessen in die Planung einbezogen. Nach Umfragen sind rund 80% der Bevölkerung gegen das Projekt. "Mit der Entscheidung beugt die Bundesregierung sich offensichtlich dem Druck, den die türkische Regierung aufgebaut hat, statt auf die Einhaltung internationaler Standards zu achten", so Drillisch.