Unfortunately, the Iranian regime keeps ignoring the suggestions by international experts to save the lake. The Iranian government has even had the success of misleading and silencing the world’s environmental organizations by rejecting any direct involvement and technical help from other countries.
The fate of Lake Urmia is essential for the people living in the vast regions around it. In fact, the very existence of South Azerbaijan is dependent upon it. The South Azerbaijani people believe that, it was the Iranian regime, which planned the lake's destruction and gradually implemented it during the last 20 years. Unfortunately, many years of the civil protests, which resulted in heavy crackdowns by the Iranian security forces, the voice of South Azerbaijani people have not been heard by the international community. People are using all civil methods in protest and paying a heavy price for the revival the lake hoping to spread the awareness to the world that the sacred lake of South Azerbaijan Lake Urmia is being killed by the deliberate policies of the Iranian government, that the Iranian regime is destroying the regions populated by the Azerbaijani people to achieve a demographic alteration, that people are about to lose their homelands where they lived for thousands years.
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Video of Garden of Eden
The article in Azerbaijani Turkish version
The article in Farsi version
Appendix:
Update
The
origins of this policy can be traced back several decades. In
1996, during a conference at the University of Tabriz,
then-President
Ayatollah
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
openly acknowledged that “water-level
control programs”
were damaging agricultural lands due to the overflow of the lake.
Other officials and so-called experts echoed these concerns,
describing
Lake
Urmia’s rising waters as a “threat” and proposing measures to
“neutralize” or even “get rid of” the lake
altogether—including
diverting its water to the Aras River or constructing additional
dams. These early discussions laid the conceptual foundation for the
state’s later interventions.
What
was officially framed as environmental stewardship was, in reality,
the prelude to a calculated program of ecological and demographic
transformation. The policy pursued several intertwined objectives:
1.
Forcible displacement of Azerbaijani Turks:
As the receding lake made surrounding villages uninhabitable,
residents were driven toward Persian-majority urban centers, where
assimilation pressures intensified.
2.
Resettlement of non-Azerbaijani populations:
The state encouraged the settlement of
an estimated 700,000
impoverished Iraqi
Kurds
into the affected areas, thereby reshaping the region’s ethnic
balance.
3.
Economic exploitation:
The drying lake exposed valuable deposits of uranium, lithium, and
mineral salts, which were subsequently exploited for the financial
gain of regime-affiliated networks.
At
its core, this policy reflects Tehran’s deep-seated strategic
anxiety: the fear that a demographically and economically stable
South Azerbaijan might one day assert its right to independence. The
destruction of Lake Urmia, therefore, must not be viewed merely as an
ecological tragedy, but as a deliberate instrument of political
control—a mechanism to weaken the region’s population, dissolve
its cohesion, and plunder its natural wealth before any potential
movement for self-determination could take root.

In August 2023, the author conducted a symbolic demonstration at Great Salt Lake State Park in Utah, holding a comparative reference to Lake Urmia. The purpose was to underscore how two major saline lakes, though ecologically distinct, reflect different governance outcomes. Great Salt Lake, located in the United States, exists within a political system characterized by public accountability, legal oversight, and institutional transparency in environmental management. By contrast, the degradation of Lake Urmia unfolded within a centralized decision-making structure where large-scale water diversion and dam construction policies were implemented without meaningful regional participation.
Photos of Lake Urmia: Before and After
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