Montenegrins protest against Albanian dam
on shared river
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[October 22, 2018]
By Stevo Vasiljevic
TUZI, Montenegro (Reuters) - Dozens of
environmental activists cycled from Montenegro's capital to the Albanian
border on Saturday to protest over the neighboring nation's construction
of a dam on the Cijevna river that flows through both countries.
As governments hurry to meet renewable energy goals set by the Paris
climate change agreement, plans to build almost 3,000 small hydro-power
plants have sparked protests across the Balkans this year.
At Saturday's demonstration, some of the protesters carried placards
reading "The Cijevna is our Fortune". "Don't (put) the Cijevna in
pipes," red a banner spread along a bridge over a dry river bed, where
protesters gathered.
Critics say the dams are endangering Europe's last free-flowing rivers,
including the Cijevna, or Cem as it is called in Albanian.
"When you clog veins in a human body, a human dies; so do rivers," said
Adem Kajosaj, 60, a pensioner and fisherman from the area around the
border town of Tuzi, who joined the protest.
A dam on the 60 kilometer-long (40-mile) river is already being built,
and protesters say Albania did not request consent from authorities in
Montenegro or notify them about the project.
They have also criticized Montenegrin authorities for failing to lodge a
protest with Albania. The two countries signed a deal on joint water
management earlier this year.
Authorities and investors say boosting hydro power will reduce regional
dependency on coal and comply with European Union energy policies. All
the countries of the Western Balkans -- Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia,
Kosovo, Macedonia and Albania -- want to join the bloc.
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Environmental activists protest in the dried out riverbed of Cijevna
River in Dinosa village, near Tuzi, Montenegro October 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Stevo Vasiljevic
Most of the small hydro plants in the region produce no more than 1
megawatt (MW) each -- roughly enough to power 750 homes, but
environmentalists say they disrupt fish migration routes and pose a
threat to dozens of species, including the Danube Salmon and Balkan
Lynx.
In southern Bosnia on Saturday, villagers protested over the
construction of two dams on the river Doljanka by a company owned by
NBA former player Mirza Teletovic.
"Ninety-five percent of villagers in the area where Doljanka flows
have signed a petition against the mini hydro plants, which would
destroy local community's plans to develop fly-fishing and sport
fishing," the Coalition for the protection of rivers in Bosnia, the
NGO, said in a statement.
(Additional reporting by Daria Sito-Sucic in Sarajevo; Writing by
Aleksandar Vasovic; Editing by Helen Popper)
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