BSS
  02 Feb 2022, 09:24

Wildlife rebounds in divided Cyprus 'dead zone'

VARISEIA, Cyprus, Feb 2, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - In a long-abandoned village in
the UN buffer zone that divides Cyprus, an endangered curly-horned wild sheep
offers hope not only for wildlife but that bitter ethnic divisions might
slowly be healed.

  The mouflon, a majestic breed endemic to the Mediterranean island, is one
of many species flourishing in the no-man's-land created when inter-communal
strife sliced Cyprus in two in the 1960s.

  "Without human influence, the wildlife and plant life have flourished,"
said Salih Gucel, director of the Institute of Environmental Sciences at Near
East University in the breakaway Turkish Cypriot north.

  "It is like stepping back in time to what our grandparents would have seen
100 years ago," Gucel said, after spotting an orchid growing amid the tumbled
ruins of a farmhouse in the village of Varisha, some 55 kilometres (35 miles)
west of the capital Nicosia.

  Cyprus has been split since 1974 when Turkish forces occupied the northern
part of the island in response to a Greek-sponsored military coup.

  The buffer zone covers some three percent of the island, is 180 kilometres
(112 miles) long and up to eight kilometres (five miles) wide.

  - Rare species 'haven' -

  Many call it the "dead zone", a tragic reminder of a frozen conflict where
bullet-riddled buildings crumble back into the dust.

  Yet it is far from empty.

  Farmers with permits can enter, while United Nations peacekeepers patrol
the line, monitoring soldiers, watching for smugglers or for refugees hoping
to cross.

  But it has also become a "haven" for rare plants and animals, a "wildlife
corridor" linking otherwise fragmented environments right across the island,
said ecologist Iris Charalambidou, from the University of Nicosia.

  "It's an area where species can escape intensive human activity,"
Charalambidou said, noting that there were some 200-300 mouflon in the
Variseia area alone, a tenth of the estimated 3,000 population.

  "These are areas where biodiversity flourishes... core populations of
species that, when populations become larger, disperse to other areas."

  Warily watching the rare human visitors, a pair of mouflon peer through an
overgrown olive grove, turning tail long before wildlife experts --
accompanied by Argentinian troops of the United Nations peacekeeping force --
come close.

  The mouflon, a national symbol once hunted to the brink of extinction, is
not the only species thriving here.

  Charalambidou said there were also threatened plants including orchids as
well as rare reptiles and endangered mammals such as the Cyprus spiny mouse.
The experts said it shows how an embattled environment can recover if given a
chance.

  "When human activity is not so intense in a certain area, you see that
nature recovers," said Charalambidou, a Greek Cypriot from the government-
controlled south of the island.

  Gucel echoes her comments. "Outside the buffer zone, herbicides have been
used... and orchids are picked or the bulbs dug up," he said.

  While the respective political leaders remain at loggerheads, the shared
wildlife of the island has helped plant the seed of cooperation between the
two sides.

  "The political situation on the island remains really difficult," said
Aleem Siddique, spokesman for the UN peacekeeping force in Cyprus.

  "But there is still a lot of peace building work that can be done at the
grassroots level."

  - 'Common goal' -

  That has included a UN-backed project identifying "biodiversity hotspots"
inside the buffer zone, bringing scientists from the two communities
together. "One of the aims of our project was to get people who are
interested in the environment in both communities to collaborate with each
other," Gucel said.

  "We have a common goal and a common interest," said Charalambidou, peering
at yellow flowers poking through coils of rusting barbed wire.

  For many islanders, there is little contact with those from the other side,
the two communities apparently increasingly set on different paths and
separate futures.

  "The more that we can get the two communities working together, the more
that we can get them to meet on common issues of concern, and that will
benefit not only the environment but also the peace process," Siddique said.

  In Cyprus, the history of division is impossible to ignore. On the hilltops
above Variseia, soldiers in fortified watchtowers eye each other across the
valley.

  Below, Gucel and Charalambidou trace a mouflon track through a tangled
almond orchard.

  "People who work in environmental issues are usually so passionate about it
that when they meet, they talk about that, and don't bother talking about
other issues," Charalambidou said. "It unites people."