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The area in Tasmania was part of 170,000 hectares added to the World Heritage Area listing last year, the ABC reported.
The Australian government said the 74,000 hectares were degraded by previous logging and should be opened up for the timber industry.
But opponents claimed only 8.6 per cent of the forests had been disturbed, with the rest being pristine old-growth rainforest.
The meeting was held in Doha, and World Heritage Committee delegates said “accepting this delisting would set an unacceptable precedent.”
With 17 national parks, 200 forest reserves, and thousands of miles of tracks, Tasmania is Australia’s only island state.
The UN has also disapproved the Australian government’s proposal to dump 3m cubic metres of dredged material into the Great Barrier Reef world heritage site, as part of the expansion of the Abbot Point coal port. Indian conglomerate Adani Enterprises’ plans to expand the port. The UN warned last week that the reef could be added to the World Heritage in Danger list at the next meeting in 2015.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott said he was disappointed by the decision.
“The application that we made to remove from the boundaries of the World Heritage listing – areas of degraded forest, areas of plantation timber – we thought was self-evidently sensible,” he said.
Federal Labor environment spokesman Mark Butler said the decision was a win for the environment.
“Why Tony Abbott wanted to go in, rip the agreement up and seek to become only the third country after Tanzania and Oman to seek to delist one of its own properties is still beyond me,” he said.
Source: Agencies
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57 founding members, many of them prominent US allies, will sign into creation the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank on Monday, the first major global financial instrument independent from the Bretton Woods system.
Representatives of the countries will meet in Beijing on Monday to sign an agreement of the bank, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Thursday. All the five BRICS countries are also joining the new infrastructure investment bank.
The agreement on the $100 billion AIIB will then have to be ratified by the parliaments of the founding members, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said at a daily press briefing in Beijing.
The AIIB is also the first major multilateral development bank in a generation that provides an avenue for China to strengthen its presence in the world’s fastest-growing region.
The US and Japan have not applied for the membership in the AIIB.