Illegal logging and conflict turns Syria's forests into 'barren land'

Illegal logging, intensified by the impact of a 12-year war, climate change, and economic challenges have ravaged Syria's once-lush forests.

The country has witnessed a "26 percent decrease in tree cover since 2000", according to data from Global Forest Watch.  / Photo: AA Archives
AA

The country has witnessed a "26 percent decrease in tree cover since 2000", according to data from Global Forest Watch.  / Photo: AA Archives

On a riverbank in war-ravaged Syria's north, felling has reduced what was once a lush forest to dispersed trees and decimated trunks poking out from dry, crumbly soil.

Twelve years of conflict that led to a spike in illegal logging, along with the effects of climate change and other factors, have eroded Syria's greenery.

The dwindling forest on the shores of the Euphrates river "is shrinking every year", said Ahmed al Sheikh, 40, a supermarket owner in the village of Jaabar, in the Kurdish-held part of Syria's Raqa province.

Before, "the forest would attract tourists, birds, purify the air and protect the area from dust storms", he said.

But fuel shortages and rampant poverty during the war have pushed many Syrians to chop the trees to sell or use for heating, dealing a blow to the nature surrounding Jaabar.

"If this goes on, desertification will follow."

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'No shade left'

Syria's war has killed more than 500,000 people and displaced millions.

It has also devastated the environment, triggering an "alarming" loss of forest cover across the country, Dutch peacebuilding group PAX warned in a report earlier this year.

The country has witnessed a "26 percent decrease in tree cover since 2000", according to data from Global Forest Watch.

Ten kilometres from Jaabar, the same fate has befallen the trees of Tuwayhina.

"In my childhood, we used to come here with friends to sit under the shade of eucalyptus and pine trees," said Mohammed Ali, surrounded by tree trunks scattered across the sun-scorched earth.

"But now it is a barren land," said the 30-year-old nurse. "Now, there is no shade left, only the heat of the sun everywhere."

"The dust storms never stop, the lake is drying up and there are no trees left," Ali said, referring to Lake Assad, Syria's largest freshwater dam reservoir.

Water levels have dropped and pollution has worsened in the Euphrates and the reservoir it feeds.

Deforestation in Syria is largely attributed to logging and thinning for firewood, according to the PAX report.

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