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  • 06-19-2005, 05:08 PM
    CTReptileRescue
    A train, a salamander, & a nun....
    Desperation fuels hunger strike for South Korean Buddhist Nun
    By Robert Kaplan and Daesik Park , Korean Working Group Co-Chairs

    A recent event in South Korea involving a salamander, a train and a
    Buddhist nun made international headlines and prompted us to share the
    story with DAPTF members and introduce the Korean Working Group of the
    DAPTF to interested parties. Jiyul, a 48 year-old Buddhist nun from Naewon
    Temple on Mount Cheonseong, northwest of Pusan, recently fasted for 100
    days demanding an immediate halt to the construction of a highway
    tunnel. She believed that the tunnel would change underground water
    systems, resulting in drying of swamps and marshes and destroying plants and
    animals living in the area. In particular, she was concerned about the
    long-tailed clawed salamander, Onychodactylus fischeri. This national
    crisis soon became more than a story about the plight of the hynobiid
    clawed salamander. Jiyul's fast focused an entire nation's attention to
    the issue and provided an important insight into a culture whose values
    are not well appreciated on an international scale, but whose !
    people have a long and rich tradition of protecting and preserving
    wildlife in the face of commonly understood setbacks. The problem is both
    complex (related to economics, religion, politics, and the environment)
    and compelling.

    The story begins in 1992 with the construction of a Korean train
    express (KTX) system intended to save 3 hours of travel time between Seoul
    and Pusan, the second largest city in the country. The project had
    already cost more than 18 billion dollars. The 13th portion of the project
    required the construction of a 13.2 km long tunnel under Mt. Cheonseong,
    where a buddhist temple and 22 unusual mountain swamps can be found.
    Due to the highly developed swamp systems and well-conserved forests,
    many endangered species live in the Mt. Cheonseong area, including 11
    species listed as endangered in the Korean Red Data Book, including two
    mammals, six birds, one snake, one salamander, two insects, and four
    plants.

    In Korea, the Ministry of the Environment must submit an environmental
    evaluation to the Court before beginning any major construction
    project. Researchers are drawn from universities, government agencies and
    private research institutes. In this case an environmental evaluation
    conducted in 1994 "indicated" that the tunnel project would not affect any
    environmentally sensitive locations or animals living in them.
    Unfortunately, the environmental evaluation is not available for public review.
    The Ministry of Environment approved the project allowing the Ministry
    of Construction and Transportation to start the work. The whole
    rail-line was approved at that time and a 293.7 km segment from Seoul to Taegu
    began operating in 2004.

    It has become standard procedure in Korea for large scale development
    projects to be planned with little attention to long-term environmental
    planning. This is particularly true during election periods. Once a
    project is approved and started, proponents routinely state that not
    finishing the project would have serious economic consequences and argue
    that stopping the project would result in the loss of jobs.

    In 2001 when the construction project reached the mountain area, many
    environmental organizations and a local buddhist group argued that the
    tunnel would disrupt the watershed and probably result in significant
    environmental perturbation. In particular, the long-tailed, clawed
    salamander, Onychodactylus fischeri, lives there. As a lungless hynobiid
    that requires relatively mature forest systems to survive (Kuzmin, 1995)
    it has been recognized as an environmental indicator species in Korea.
    The members of the organizations and temple made the salamander the
    plaintiff against the Ministry of Environment, suing to stop the project
    until another environmental assessment could be undertaken. This was the
    first time a non-human animal was a plaintiff in a law suit in Korea
    and it became known as the "salamander trial." Several thousand people
    appeared before the court testifying on the salamanders' behalf, some
    even trying to represent a salamander's "feelings" to the judge. Th!
    e courts ultimately decided in 2004 that Onychodactylus had no legal
    standing.

    The current President Rho, as a candidate in 2002, promised that
    another fair environmental evaluation would be carried out and the project
    carefully re-considered if he were elected. The promise was not kept,
    however, prompting the nun, Jiyul, to get involved. She urged the
    government to conduct another evaluation to be undertaken by researchers
    selected by both the government and private environmental organizations.

    Several months ago, Jiyul started her third hunger strike in front of
    the President's house taking only water and salt for 87 days. But when
    no progress was made she suddenly left the location without a word,
    leading people to imagine that she went off to an unknown place to die for
    her beloved salamanders. Huge national debates rapidly ensued arguing
    both for and against the nun and her salamander. After several days, a
    Buddhist organization found her and started to take care of her. She
    still refused to eat and as her condition deteriorated the national
    debate turned to one of questioning the impact of her death on Korean
    society as a whole. At the eleventh hour on the 100th day, the government
    relinquished and agreed to conduct another environmental evaluation
    within three months.

    The plight of the hynobiid clawed salamander has focused an entire
    nation's attention and is looming large in the minds of many Koreans. An
    important challenge facing the country is how to continue the long and
    rich tradition of protecting and preserving wildlife in the face of
    unbridled development.

    References

    Kuzmin SL. 1995. The clawed salamanders of Asia; biology, distribution,
    and conservation. Westarp Wissenschaften, Magdeburg.

    For further information please contact:
    Daesik Park: parkda@kangwon.ac.kr
    or Robert Kaplan: taricha@reed.edu
    Website in Korean: http://academic.reed.edu/biology/korea_daptf/
    ________________________________________________________________________
    Rusty
  • 06-20-2005, 05:59 AM
    Ginevive
    Re: A train, a salamander, & a nun....
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Rusty_Reptiles


    It has become standard procedure in Korea for large scale development
    projects to be planned with little attention to long-term environmental
    planning. This is particularly true during election periods. Once a
    project is approved and started, proponents routinely state that not
    finishing the project would have serious economic consequences and argue
    that stopping the project would result in the loss of jobs.
    [/url]

    Don't you just love the psychology behind that? :evileye:
    I wonder what ever happened to the nun..?
    ________________________________________________________________________
    Rusty

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