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Africa, the world's 'septic tank'
By
Christophe Parayre
AFP
DAKAR
Petroleumworld.com
09 26 06
"We talk of globalisation, of the global village, but here in Africa,
we are under the impression of being that village's septic tank,"
says Senegalese ecologist Haidar al-Ali.
A series of pollution scandals, ranging from the discharge of toxic
waste in Ivory Coast to radioactive tanks in Somalia, show that Africa's
poverty, corruption, and non-existent or malfunctioning democracies
make it the world's preferred dumping ground.
According to the French environment protection group, Robin des Bois,
the waste sent to Africa -- such as old tyres, cars and broken computers
containing toxic parts -- is "very difficult, if not impossible,
to recycle."
"To Asia goes everything that can be salvaged and that is of high
added value, such as copper wire and metal scraps," the group's
director Charlotte Nithart said.
In Abidjan, Ivory Coast's economic capital, seven people died, 24 were
hospitalised and there were 37,000 calls for medical help after an Ivoirian
firm, Tommy, dumped toxic waste at 11 public sites across the city in
August.
The company had been hired to properly dispose of 500 tonnes of a highly-toxic
mixture of oil residue and caustic soda used to rinse out a Greek-owned
ship's tanks.
In the last days of 2004, the tsunami started by an earthquake in Asia
hit the coast of Somalia where it damaged toxic water containers on
the northern coast of this country, plunged into anarchy by 15 years
of civil war.
Health problems were reported by the local population including "acute
respiratory infections, dry heavy coughing and mouth bleeding, abdominal
haemorrhages, unusual skin chemical reactions, and sudden death after
inhaling toxic materials," according to the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP).
Starting from the early 1980s and continuing into the civil war, the
hazardous waste dumped along Somalia's coast includes radioactive uranium
waste, lead, cadmium, mercury, industrial, hospital, chemical, leather
treatment and other toxic waste, UNEP wrote in a country report.
In 1996, the European Parliament officially asked the governments of
the United Kingdom, Italy and Spain to repatriate toxic waste exported
to South Africa by Thor Chemicals Ltd.
The parliament noted that hundreds of tonnes of toxic mercury waste
had caused damage to the environment and caused severe health problems
amongst local people.
In the West African nation of Cameroon, about 5,600 litres (1,232 gallons)
of chlorine were dumped in 2005 in a village near Douala, the economic
capital.
Authorities tried to dilute the chlorine at sea but the operation turned
disastrous when the mixture exploded, killing a soldier and injuring
about 10 people.
Africa is a favourite place to treat or simply dump hazardous waste
because treating such waste in industrialised countries is very expensive.
Robin des Bois said it costs between 300 to 500 euros (380 to 634 dollars)
to treat a cubic metre (35 cubic feet) of hazardous waste. In Africa
it is between six to 15 times cheaper because often there is no real
treatment and no proper storage.
The Basel Convention, set up in 1989 to prevent dumping of toxic waste
in countries without proper facilities for handling it, has helped regulate
the flow.
But illegal traffic in toxic waste continues, Robin des Bois's Nithart
said, "because businessmen try to get around the regulations in
order to save money."
For the Senegalese ecologist "the waste is often accepted by corrupt
people or factions who want money to buy weapons."
To really put an end to this traffic "we need sentries, people
willing to get involved in protecting our environment," he added.
Nithart said lack of controls in Africa were part of the problem.
"If, in African ports there were stricter controls to check that
these wastes did not arrive, if the loops were closed in the health
and environmental controls, then the Probo Koala (the Greek ship in
the Ivory Coast) would not have arrived in Abidjan."
But she also put the responsibility squarely on the shoulders of European
authorities.
"A European country like the Netherlands, with an infrastructure,
a port authority, specialists in waste disposal, customs and everything
else, still let the Probo Koala go," she said.
"It's not when hazardous waste arrives that Europeans should try
and control it but when it leaves," Nithart said.
AFP
25 1152 GMT 09 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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