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Global migrating birds are starving to death

Please Help World Migrating birds, Restore Saemangeum wetland

Target:
South Korean lawmakers
Sponsored by: 

Tens of thousands of migrating birds are facing starvation because the worlds largest land reclamation project has all but destroyed their most important refueling station. Saemangeum is the regions most important refuelling post for around 400,000 migrating waders negotiating a 15,000 mile round trip between the southern hemisphere and south-east Asia, and breeding sites in Alaska and Russia. At the height of migration, over 150,000 waders from more than 25 species seek food at Saemangeum in a single day. The spoon-billed sandpiper and Nordmanns greenshank face extinction as their remaining populations rely on the tidal-flats of the Yellow Sea and on Saemangeum in particular. The Saemangeum is a world treasure for the world's migrating birds but in a massive blow for conservation and wildlife, the Seoul High Court has decided that the South Korean Government can resume the Saemangeum wetland reclamation, which according to the Korean media is "designed to transform large tidal flats off the countrys southwestern coast into farmlands and a freshwater reservoir". 

The 40,000ha Saemangeum project on South Korea's west coast has generated enormous controversy as the area is one of the most important wetland sites for migrating waterbirds in Asia, with around 400,000 waterbirds annually passing through the wetlands or using them as   staging area.

The wetlands also support the highest fish diversity in Korea, and are a vitally important spawning ground. The livelihoods of 25,000 Korean fishermen depend on them

Richard Grimmett, Head of BirdLife International's Asia Division said: "The Saemangeum project will have one of the biggest environmental impacts of any construction project in Asia over the coming decade. It will mean the loss of tidal mudflats and a feeding area for vast numbers of shorebirds on their East Asia-Australasian migration, and will impact fisheries and livelihoods in the Yellow Sea."

In April, 2006, dumper trucks poured their final loads of rubble and rock into the last remaining gap in a 33-km long dyke, and closed off 40,000 hectares of this vast estuary from the sea. With almost no tide, the shellfish beds - that had until that day supported the world's largest concentration of Great Knot - started to die. By April 2007, most of Saemangeum's tidal-flats had either been flooded, or turned into desert - huge expanses of drying mud, littered with dead shells, plastic, and even fishing boats - all part of a massive "reclamation" project, with still no clear end-use.

As South Korean lawmakers debate Saemangeum's future, we need to send them a clear message, 40,000 times, one email for every hectare of wetland being destroyed:

Let them know that: Saemangeum is still internationally important for shorebirds, still supporting species like the rapidly-declining Endangered Spoon-billed Sandpiper.

·         South Korea is a signatory to the Ramsar Convention, and will even host the next Ramsar Conference of the Parties in 2008. It is time for South Korea to honor the obligations of this Convention.

·         We need urgently to open the sluice-gates in the Saemangeum seawall, to restore more of the tidal-flow, and bring life back to some of the estuary.

·         The neighboring Geum Estuary is still threatened with "reclamation" (a euphemism for the damming and destruction of intertidal wetland). This site too is extremely important internationally, and needs to be protected by national law and designated a Ramsar site.

Birds Korea, a conservation group in South Korea, wants the UK government and the EU, together with governments elsewhere, to offer support to South Korean authorities in conserving and managing Saemangeum. The group is also urging people to write to the South Korean embassy in the UK calling for the sluice gates to be kept  open.

Nial Moores, Director of Birds Korea, said: International appeals to the authorities here in South Korea would underline just how precious Saemangeum is. The Ministry of Agriculture claims that the Saemangeum birds will just move to neighbouring estuaries but the birds there are already fighting over food and at least one of these estuaries may also be reclaimed.  

Please sign this petition and the petition links below as many as you can.
We need the whole world to know that Saemangeum wetland is an important staging area for our global migrating birds

For more information please see the ff links:

http://10000birds.com/two-minutes-for-the-spoonbilled-sand-wwwrestoresaemangeumcom.htm


http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7840


http://eyesage.blogspot.com/2007/07/restore-saemangeum-click-here.html


http://dartfordwaffler.co.uk/index.php/124/


http://www.birdskorea.org/Habitats/Wetlands/Saemangeum/BK-HA-Saemangeum-Mainpage.shtml


http://korea.ahrchk.net/english/mainfile.php/news200306/22/

http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0704-05.htm


http://www.globalresponse.org/history.php?record=2168


http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200704/200704040021.html


http://www.tve.org/earthreport/archive/doc.cfm?aid=1246


http://english.kfem.or.kr/hot/hot1.htm

Tens of thousands of migrating birds are facing starvation because the worlds largest land reclamation project has all but destroyed their most important refueling station. Saemangeum is the regions most important refuelling post for around 400,000 migrating waders negotiating a 15,000 mile round trip between the southern hemisphere and south-east Asia, and breeding sites in Alaska and Russia. At the height of migration, over 150,000 waders from more than 25 species seek food at Saemangeum in a single day. The spoon-billed sandpiper and Nordmanns greenshank face extinction as their remaining populations rely on the tidal-flats of the Yellow Sea and on Saemangeum in particular. The Saemangeum is a world treasure for the world's migrating birds but in a massive blow for conservation and wildlife, the Seoul High Court has decided that the South Korean Government can resume the Saemangeum wetland reclamation, which according to the Korean media is "designed to transform large tidal flats off the countrys southwestern coast into farmlands and a freshwater reservoir". 

The 40,000ha Saemangeum project on South Korea's west coast has generated enormous controversy as the area is one of the most important wetland sites for migrating waterbirds in Asia, with around 400,000 waterbirds annually passing through the wetlands or using them as   staging area.

The wetlands also support the highest fish diversity in Korea, and are a vitally important spawning ground. The livelihoods of 25,000 Korean fishermen depend on them

Richard Grimmett, Head of BirdLife International's Asia Division said: "The Saemangeum project will have one of the biggest environmental impacts of any construction project in Asia over the coming decade. It will mean the loss of tidal mudflats and a feeding area for vast numbers of shorebirds on their East Asia-Australasian migration, and will impact fisheries and livelihoods in the Yellow Sea."

In April, 2006, dumper trucks poured their final loads of rubble and rock into the last remaining gap in a 33-km long dyke, and closed off 40,000 hectares of this vast estuary from the sea. With almost no tide, the shellfish beds - that had until that day supported the world's largest concentration of Great Knot - started to die. By April 2007, most of Saemangeum's tidal-flats had either been flooded, or turned into desert - huge expanses of drying mud, littered with dead shells, plastic, and even fishing boats - all part of a massive "reclamation" project, with still no clear end-use.

As South Korean lawmakers debate Saemangeum's future, we need to send them a clear message, 40,000 times, one email for every hectare of wetland being destroyed:

Let them know that: Saemangeum is still internationally important for shorebirds, still supporting species like the rapidly-declining Endangered Spoon-billed Sandpiper.

·         South Korea is a signatory to the Ramsar Convention, and will even host the next Ramsar Conference of the Parties in 2008. It is time for South Korea to honor the obligations of this Convention.

·         We need urgently to open the sluice-gates in the Saemangeum seawall, to restore more of the tidal-flow, and bring life back to some of the estuary.

·         The neighboring Geum Estuary is still threatened with "reclamation" (a euphemism for the damming and destruction of intertidal wetland). This site too is extremely important internationally, and needs to be protected by national law and designated a Ramsar site.

Birds Korea, a conservation group in South Korea, wants the UK government and the EU, together with governments elsewhere, to offer support to South Korean authorities in conserving and managing Saemangeum. The group is also urging people to write to the South Korean embassy in the UK calling for the sluice gates to be kept  open.

Nial Moores, Director of Birds Korea, said: International appeals to the authorities here in South Korea would underline just how precious Saemangeum is. The Ministry of Agriculture claims that the Saemangeum birds will just move to neighbouring estuaries but the birds there are already fighting over food and at least one of these estuaries may also be reclaimed.  

Please sign this petition and the petition links below as many as you can.
We need the whole world to know that Saemangeum wetland is an important staging area for our global migrating birds

For more information please see the ff links:

http://10000birds.com/two-minutes-for-the-spoonbilled-sand-wwwrestoresaemangeumcom.htm


http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7840


http://eyesage.blogspot.com/2007/07/restore-saemangeum-click-here.html


http://dartfordwaffler.co.uk/index.php/124/


http://www.birdskorea.org/Habitats/Wetlands/Saemangeum/BK-HA-Saemangeum-Mainpage.shtml


http://korea.ahrchk.net/english/mainfile.php/news200306/22/

http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0704-05.htm


http://www.globalresponse.org/history.php?record=2168


http://english.chosun.com/w21data/html/news/200704/200704040021.html


http://www.tve.org/earthreport/archive/doc.cfm?aid=1246


http://english.kfem.or.kr/hot/hot1.htm

We the undersigned is asking for the reopening of the Saemangeum wetland for our world's migrating birds. This wetland is an important part of the global ecosystem
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We signed the "Please Help World Migrating birds, Restore Saemangeum wetland" petition!
# 353:
7:33 pm PDT, Sep 26, Nayomi St, Canada
# 352:
2:24 pm PDT, Sep 19, Simos Tarabatzis, Greece
# 351:
9:31 am PDT, Sep 13, Jamie Scott, Texas
# 350:
5:24 am PDT, Sep 7, Tamarah Swensen, Netherlands
# 349:
12:16 am PDT, Sep 7, LuCy J Boogaard, Netherlands
# 348:
12:22 pm PDT, Sep 3, Thomas Jones, New York
# 347:
11:32 am PDT, Aug 29, Pirjo Sundqvist, Sweden
# 346:
3:52 am PDT, Aug 29, Malissia Applewhite, Trinidad And Tobago
# 345:
9:56 am PDT, Aug 27, Ron Stephen, Canada
# 344:
6:02 pm PDT, Aug 26, Robert Stockstill, California
# 343:
3:17 am PDT, Aug 26, Dorothy Tanaka, Canada
Restore Saemangeum wetlands.Open the gates of the seawall and restore the tidal flow.Stop the destruction because it has domino affect. All life is precious.
# 342:
5:27 am PDT, Aug 25, Regena Coult, United Kingdom
# 341:
4:37 am PDT, Aug 25, Stacey Baker, Georgia
For more impact, add a personal comment here
# 340:
5:13 pm PDT, Aug 24, Bec Mason, Australia
# 339:
7:43 am PDT, Aug 22, Stefan Vasile, Romania
# 338:
2:26 am PDT, Aug 22, ANGELA BOND, United Kingdom
# 337:
12:20 am PDT, Aug 22, Name not displayed, Japan
# 336:
8:21 am PDT, Aug 21, Neslihan Gedik, Turkey
# 335:
8:09 am PDT, Aug 21, Asli Gedik, Germany
# 334:
5:47 am PDT, Aug 21, Glen Venezio, Puerto Rico
# 333:
2:15 am PDT, Aug 21, Marguerite Harrington, France
# 332:
11:06 pm PDT, Aug 20, GREG ONGJOCO, Philippines
# 331:
5:01 pm PDT, Aug 20, Jefferey Morrison, Canada
Please keep nature in balance! If one thing starts going wrong in the world, the rest of the world goes with it!
# 330:
3:17 pm PDT, Aug 20, Robin Makar, New Jersey
# 329:
9:41 am PDT, Aug 19, Megan Howard, Illinois
# 328:
10:39 am PDT, Aug 18, Sunil Srinath, India
# 327:
11:53 am PDT, Aug 13, Denise Lytle, New Jersey
# 326:
9:23 am PDT, Aug 13, Nino Uremović, Croatia
# 325:
8:46 pm PDT, Aug 11, Jessica Tisak, Virginia
# 324:
5:50 am PDT, Aug 10, Christi Smith, Illinois
# 323:
5:11 am PDT, Aug 10, Anne Dillon, United Kingdom
# 322:
5:04 am PDT, Aug 10, Lisa Fleener, Minnesota
We have no right destroying their land therefore killing them, it was theirs first, it needs to be protected land!
# 321:
11:08 pm PDT, Aug 9, Janet Hunt, New Zealand
Of what use or worth is a world that is populated only by humans? Restore the Saemangeum; leave the others alone.
# 320:
8:57 pm PDT, Aug 8, John Cornwell, Arizona
Mankind can be very clever in his mechanations to improve society, but many times not farsighted enough. Take a moment to think of what will be left to future generations to restore or rebuild. Hindsight is 20/20, vision for the future though rare is priceless.
# 319:
8:22 pm PDT, Aug 8, Graciela Gomez, Florida
# 318:
8:42 am PDT, Aug 8, Debbie Gornee, Pennsylvania
# 317:
1:17 am PDT, Aug 8, Roxie Schliesman, Wisconsin
# 316:
5:16 pm PDT, Aug 7, ADRIANA BLANDO CORDERO, Mexico
# 315:
4:35 pm PDT, Aug 7, Cristina Seica, Portugal
# 314:
7:00 am PDT, Aug 7, Catherine Spurlin, Illinois
# 313:
6:31 am PDT, Aug 7, Ria Smit, Netherlands
# 312:
6:05 am PDT, Aug 7, Suzanne Rice, Virginia
Please help save our wetlands and the migrating birds that need them to survive.
# 311:
1:40 am PDT, Aug 7, Pam Fioretti, Australia
# 310:
11:39 pm PDT, Aug 6, Eric Angeletti, Virginia
# 309:
10:53 pm PDT, Aug 6, Anna Hickl, Germany
# 308:
8:00 pm PDT, Aug 6, Lily Gruber, Kansas
# 307:
2:49 pm PDT, Aug 5, Merissa Hatcher, Kentucky
# 306:
6:15 am PDT, Aug 5, Alicya Lima, Netherlands
# 305:
3:38 am PDT, Aug 5, Judyta Dymkowska, Poland
# 304:
2:36 am PDT, Aug 5, Yu Jun Toh, Singapore
# 303:
1:18 am PDT, Aug 5, Marla De Vries, Netherlands
# 302:
5:45 pm PDT, Aug 4, Tanya O, Canada
# 301:
3:15 pm PDT, Aug 4, Annelies Ooms, Belgium
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