Book description
As undisputed leader of the Soviet Union, Joseph Stalin was
directly responsible for the deaths of up to 60 million of his fellow
citizens, a truly horrific figure which confirms him as one of the
most notorious mass murderers in history. But Stalin not only waged
war against his own people he and his successors regarded nature as an
enemy that could be overcome by the might of Soviet technology and the
brute force of slave labour. The building of vast networks of canals
and the diversion of major rivers has created untold environmental
damage, whilst Soviet nuclear and biological weapons programmes
contaminated vast areas and caused unimaginable agony for human and
animal life. In this book Struan Stevenson travels to the former
Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgystan
and Tajikistan. From the Semipalatinsk region of east Kazakhstan,
where over 600 nuclear tests were carried out between 1949 and 1990,
to the Aral Sea, the desiccation of which has reduced what was the
world's fourth largest inland body of water to half the size it was
just 50 years ago, he presents a grim catalogue of environmental
catastrophe. As well as talking with those whose lives continue to be
cruelly affected by this terrible legacy, he also meets those who are
trying to deal with its wider consequences as it threatens to impact
far beyond the steppes of Central Asia. Despite almost insurmountable
challenges, however, there ultimately is a strong message of hope as
both local and international organizations face up to the effects of
disastrous and inhuman Soviet policies.
Struan Stevenson is Chairman of the European Parliament's Delegation
for Relations with Iraq and President of the Climate Change,
Biodiversity and Sustainable Development Intergroup. He was appointed
during 2010 by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation Europe
(OSCE) as a Personal Representative (Roving Ambassador) of the Chairman
in Office (Kazakhstan) responsible for Ecology and Environment with a
particular focus on Central Asia. His publication about the plight of
victims of Stalin's nuclear tests in East Kazakhstan, Crying Forever,
has to date raised more than ,000, a sum which has been donated to the
victims of the nuclear tests in Kazakhstan through the worldwide charity
Mercy Corps.