This place is important for Muslims and also for Kurdish people since Tunceli was formerly called Dersim which means “silver door” which was the gateway to Kurdistan and also an indication for the richness of minerals which are by the way nowadays mined just by foreign companies especially Canadians, the same like

in Greece. In 1936 under Atatürk the name was changed, so where all the kurdish names in Turkey. This was turkish development as they called it. There where also in 1938 a huge genocide taking place in some rocks 20km from Tunceli called Dere Laç, I passed there just today and when I was told that about 100000 Kurds where killed there I had some same feeling coming up like I had when I was in Mauthausen in Austria.
I met some older Turks in Istanbul who wished Atatürk back and told me about the good progress he made and that wealth of western Turkey is based on this one person. In east side though I hear a little different stories and they do not share the same opinion…
Nowadays Munzur is been kept under surveillance by military because PKK should be hiding in this wild mountains. They have check points all over the place, burning down parts of the forest to see the enemy before approaching, cut down bridges over Munzur river and spend a whole sum of money in fancy military equipment to “keep the area safe” for normal people.
A newer idea of Turkish government is easy and also paying off. They just want to

flood the whole area with building dams again and gaining energy which lacks anyway. Some Austrian banks also give some credits again and the thing is done, 2 from 8 dams are already built, not yet in National Park area but not so far. People here really like this area for hiking and even more for picnic, which we did by the way today and it was really lovely. I saw the river and its picturesque landscape. There is also a rafting school in Ovacık and I am sure that kayakers would really enjoy it. This is maybe a solution, at least to safe the most beautiful spots. There should be an international kayak or rafting event, which is for sure really difficult to impossible to organise especially in this region but it´s definitely worth it. Actually if there would just be an EIA (Environmental Impact Assesment) made before building any dam it could safe not only some animals.
In Munzur region there is again very fragile nature with many endemic species, like the redfish (Kirmiyi Alabalik in turkish) or special variety of garlic. That´s why some places here are called Garlic Mountains. Furthermore there are again birds and more plants that are worth of protection.
This is just some abstract from the impact humans can take again on nature and their creatures including Homo sapiens evolved for a long time.
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γεια σου Χάνες. Καλή συνέχεια!
Hallo Hannes,
Bist du noch in der Tuerkei oder schon wieder weiter? Wann triffst du deine Freunde?
Fährst du über hohe Bergpaesse?
Alles Liebe,
Mama
Bin noch in der Türkei, hoffentlich letzte Woche. Bin nicht mehr sehr weit vom Iran entfernt. Allerdings liegen noch ein paar Berge dazwischen. Bei einem 5000er fahr ich vorbei und im Iran werden wir dann sogar bei einem 5600m Berg vorbeikommen. Freunde treff ich hoffentlich in der ersten großen Stadt im Iran. Allerdings hat Angelos erst ab Mitte Juni Zeit, aber Dean vielleicht schon früher. Freu mich schon auf Begleitung..
Der Artikel ist so schlimm auch nicht, die Fotos die mehr zeigen stell ich erst wenn ich weiter weg bin ins Netz.
Bis bald
P.S. Gutes Gelingen beim Räumen
Hannes, I heard last weekend from Lakis at the concert. How are you? My all the best wishes to you. You are great, man, RESPECT:))
Gonna follow your route here ok. Move like a river, nothing can stand on your way;)
Take care
@anonym
that’s very friendly, though I don’t know who you are.. Maybe you can tell it to me.
Greetings from the border to Iran.
Its Yildirim:) I forgot the write my name:) How are you man?
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