USAID Helps Establish First National Park in
Afghanistan

USAID Press Release
Press Office: 202-712-4320
Public Information: 202-712-4810
Kabul, Afghanistan | April 22, 2009 - In celebration of International
Earth Day, the Director General of Afghanistan's National Environmental
Protection Agency (NEPA) declared Band-e-Amir as Afghanistan's first
national park. This official designation affords legal protection to the
lakes and surrounding landscape, and will ensure sustainable environmental
management for this area of great natural beauty. Since 2006, the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID) has been working with
the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and local
communities surrounding Band-e-Amir to establish the national park.
Band-e-Amir is a series of six lakes in central Bamyan Province, and
the national park covers 56,000 hectares of land. The lakes present a
stunning visual landscape, with their clear, azure-blue color set against
red-rock cliffs and dry grasslands. The lakes are held back by natural
travertine dams, created by calcium deposits. Some of the dams are
breathtaking: 30-foot rock walls stretching across the valley in long,
graceful arcs. The combination of desert, water, and rock make for
landscapes that rival those of national parks anywhere in the world.
To ensure the park's long-term sustainability, USAID, through its
implementing partner the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), founded a
local institution to manage the proposed park and helped to prepare a park
management plan. USAID also advised the government on the development of
the legal framework for establishing protected areas. The official
declaration enhances the Afghanistan's ability to manage its natural
resources, and will help bring international recognition to this area of
great natural beauty.
The national park designation will also encourage economic development
in the fifteen villages surrounding Band-e-Amir. Before the years of war
and Taliban rule, Band-e-Amir was a popular tourist destination, and
recently, tourism has begun to increase. With help from USAID and its
implementing partners WCS, Ecodit, and the Agha Khan Network, local
entrepreneurs are already building small shops, restaurants, and hotels -
in accordance with the park's environmental management plan - to serve the
growing number of tourists. A campground is also planned. These
improvements are expected to attract more Afghan and international
tourists over the coming years, contributing to Afghanistan's economic
growth in an environmentally responsible manner. |