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The event was marked at Sharem E1-Sheikh, a Gulf town in Egyptian Sinai, both by a confer- ence on environmental protection and a beach cleanup day in which 150 young Egyptians participat- ed. The youngsters also distrib- uted brochures about protecting the environment to tourists stay- ing in Sharem El-Sheikh hotels. At the same time, in Eilat, May- or Gaby Kadosh and the then-En- vironment Minister Yossi Sand joined 100 other divers who col- lected rubbish — ranging from plastic water bottles and cups to discarded swimming goggles and snorkels — that lay strewn along the coral reefs south of the city. One thousand other people, most of them schoolchildren, filled in- numerable plastic bags with the cans, plastic bottles and papers that were littering the sandy coast. line and nearby wadis. A few kilometers away, in the Jordanian town ofAqaba, similar activities took place. Among the divers collecting underwater rub- bish there was Princess Basma Ali of the Jordanian royal family. Then, at the end of the day, there was a "clean-up" party. Now, EcoPeace has embarked upon a new project in the Gulf, one in which hotels from Sharem El- Sheikh, Aqaba and Eilat are co- operating. All'of them are measuring the impact they have on the environ- ment of the area, and seeking— in cooperation with one another --- to reduce that impact by sav- ing water, electricity and other in- puts. The Dead Sea is very much on the EcoPeace agenda as well. Following meetings in Tel Aviv and Amman, the organization has formulated a plan for coordinated development of the Dead Sea area, where, at present, the countries concerned are implementing in- dependent — and sometimes con- flicting — schemes for new hotels and chemical plants. The Eco- Peace proposal calls for, among other things: a master plan for Dead Sea tourism; archaeological and biodiversity studies of the area; a survey of the environ- mental impact of the Dead Sea potash industry; a decision to keep international highways away from the shores of the Dead Sea; a wa- ter utilization master plan for the Jordan River Basin; and the list- ineta ing the Site. Sea as a World Heritage Plans are one thing. Getting na- tional authorities to carry them out is something else altogether. clest bststatha For example, politicalpolan for the fact t nstle tmainl sewaygereszthn that would protect Israeli coastal towns Revot Nech hemlaI o Msrae eyer writes from