Turkey's Crazy Project
Plans for a new international shipping lane through Istanbul have been dubbed 'crazy' by Turkey's president, who thought it up - and by his opponents. Will the project go ahead?
A giant new canal for the world鈥檚 biggest ships is the most ambitious engineering plan yet proposed by Turkey鈥檚 President Erdogan, whose massive infrastructure projects have already changed the face of his country. The proposed waterway would slice through Istanbul, creating in effect a second Bosphorus, the busy shipping lane that is now the only outlet from the Black Sea. The president himself has called the project 'crazy'. But he says it would 'save the future of Istanbul', easing traffic in the Bosphorus and reducing the risk of a terrible accident there. The plan has met a storm of opposition. Istanbul鈥檚 mayor says it would 鈥渕urder鈥 the historic city. Critics claim the canal would be an environmental disaster, cost billions of dollars that Turkey can鈥檛 afford 鈥 and provoke severe tensions with Russia, which is determined to preserve existing rules on traffic into and out of the Black Sea. Tim Whewell reports from a divided city. He sails down the Bosphorus with a pilot who knows all its twists and turns, joins a marine biologist diving for coral in the Sea of Marmara, meets a woman whose Ottoman-era mansion was wrecked by a ship, has tea with a former admiral who was arrested over his opposition to the project, and visits the tranquil forests around the city, now threatened by development. Will the canal still go ahead? Who would lose 鈥 and who would benefit?
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