Ik heb lang moeten nadenken wat ik zou tiepen..... maar ik kwam niet verder dan de volgende zin,quote:GIFVERVUILING BEDREIGT SOMALIE
De kust van het Oost-Afrikaanse land Somalië wordt bedreigd door vervuiling met chemische producten en nucleair afval.
Dat zou afkomstig zijn uit containers die in het geheim in zee zijn gedumpt door een aantal Europese landen. Wie welke ?!
Door de vloedgolf van eind december zijn containers met dat afval op het strand aangespoeld. Dat heeft geleid tot een aantal ziekte-klachten. Veel Somaliërs hebben last van bloedingen, huidaandoeningen en ademhalingsproblemen.
Yep daar zijn die landen goed voor. Onze rotzooi. Geef de corrupte regeringen een paar grijpstuivers en je mag alles in zee dumpen.quote:Waves 'brought waste to Somalia'
Tsunami waves could have spread illegally dumped nuclear waste and other toxic waste on Somalia's coast, a United Nations spokesman has said.
Nick Nuttall of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) told the BBC that December's tsunami appeared to have broken barrels and scattered waste.
Mr Nuttall said a preliminary UN report had found that Somalis in the northern areas were falling sick as a result. Some firms have been dumping waste off Somalia's coast for years, the UN says.
It says international companies have been taken advantage of the fact that Somalia had no functioning government from the early 1990s until recently.
Cancer link
"It appears that the tsunami broke open the containers and scattered a lot of these toxic substances around," Mr Nuttall told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme.
"We are talking about radioactive chemicals, heavy metals, medical waste.. you name it," he said.
Mr Nuttall said that reports from the tsunami-hit areas in northern Somalia had found that some local villagers there had mouth bleeds and haemorrhages. He said that some of the hazardous wastes had been linked with cancer. "We know this hazardous waste is on the land and is being blown around in the air and being carried to villages.
"There is also a possibility - which needs to be urgently investigated - about whether some of these chemicals have got into the coastal waters. However, the spokesman said the UNEP needed to assess the full impact for the country. He said that the waste posed significant danger to Somalia's fishing industry and also local marine life.
BBC
Ik heb het vermoeden dat dit slechts het topje van de ijsberg is...... en dat binnenkort nog meer berichten binnen zullen sijpelen.quote:Tsunami's Legacy Includes Airborne Toxins
SciDev.Net (London)
3 Mars 2005
Publié sur le web le 3 Mars 2005
Ochieng' Ogodo
Nairobi
Regions hit by the 26 December 2004 tsunami have been seriously contaminated by saltwater, bacteria and even nuclear waste, says a report released last week by the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP).
According to the report, groundwater in many of the affected areas has been contaminated by seawater infiltration and damage to toilets, septic tanks and sanitation systems.
It also says the tsunami stirred nuclear and other hazardous waste that had previously been illegally dumped along the coast of Somalia and that this waste is now affecting the health of local people.
The report contains the findings of UNEP's Asian Tsunami Task Force's rapid environmental assessment, the first attempt to determine the tsunami's environmental impact.
Releasing the report to 100 environment ministers at UNEP's 23rd Governing Council meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, the agency's executive director, Klaus Toepfer, said that 60,000 wells and 15,000 hand pumps were contaminated, damaged or destroyed in Indonesia.
"All 28,000 hectares of coastal irrigation schemes in Aceh [Indonesia] were severely impacted," said Toepfer. "Ninety per cent of toilets on some badly affected islands in the Maldives may have been lost."
The report says that groundwater in as many as 30 of the Maldives islands has been contaminated by sewage, with tests indicating that many of these supplies now breach international safety standards.
Other contaminants in the Maldives' water supply since the tsunami include asbestos and oil, which has leaked from fuel drums and damaged generators.
In Somalia, said Toepfer, there is evidence that the tsunami caused nuclear and other hazardous waste to threaten the health of local communities.
Since the early 1980s, Somalia's coastline has been used as dumping ground for such waste produced by other countries. Somalia's long civil war and the inability of its authorities to police the coast, has allowed other nations to illegally dump uranium, radioactive waste, industrial chemicals and heavy metals such as cadmium and mercury.
"Most of the waste was simply dumped on the beaches in containers and disposable leaking barrels which ranged from small to big tanks without regard to the health of the local population and any environmentally devastating impacts," says the report.
The tsunami stirred up waste dumped on Somali beaches around North Hobyo and Warshek, south of Benadir, according to UNEP. Wind carried toxic materials inland, leading to health problems in local villages.
Many people in the affected areas are complaining of unusual health problems including acute respiratory infections, bleeding mouths and skin conditions, says UNEP's report.
UNEP says it is urgent that infrastructure such as wells and sewage containment are repaired, and that hazardous wastes are removed. It suggests that these efforts use labour intensive work programmes to maximise benefits to the livelihoods of poor communities.
In the longer term, UNEP calls for regional warning systems, not only for tsunamis but also for other natural disasters. It proposes plans to identify vulnerable coastal areas where the building of homes, hotels, factories and other infrastructure should be banned or restricted.
Ja, en wat is er mis met een overval plegen waarbij je iemand doodknuppelt. Je hebt het geld toch nodig.quote:Op zaterdag 5 maart 2005 12:18 schreef DrWolffenstein het volgende:
Wat is er nu mis mee? Je moet je rotzooi toch kwijt?
Zeg wolfie.,..... we hebben het hier niet over jouw vuilniszak.... maar over kwik en uranium loslaten in de natuur (zee) dichtbij bewoonde centra..quote:Op zaterdag 5 maart 2005 12:18 schreef DrWolffenstein het volgende:
Wat is er nu mis mee? Je moet je rotzooi toch kwijt?
het parlement van Somalie zetelt overigens nog in Kenia, daar Somalie oa nog te onveilig isquote:169 tt-EEN 169 za 05 mrt 18:09:01
buitenland
SOMALIE WIL GEVAARLIJK AFVAL WEG
Parlementsleden uit Somalië hebben om
internationale hulp gevraagd om grote
hoeveelheden gevaarlijk afval te
verwijderen.
De voorbije weken zijn op de Somalische
kusten vele containers met zwaar
vervuild afval aangespoeld. Die waren
door de tsunamiramp losgewrikt van de
zeebodem. Sindsdien zijn in het
uitgestrekte kustgebied verschillende
inwoners getroffen door ademproblemen
en vreemde huidaandoeningen.
Het kustgebied voor Somalië is jaren-
lang gebruikt als vuilnisbak voor
stoffen als uranium, kwik en lood. Dat
gebeurde vooral in de periode na de
staatsgreep tegen dictator Siad Barre.
Je bent in de war, er liggen op diverse plaatsen in voormalige sovjet-havens atoomonderzeeërs wegroestend hun laatste adem als electriciteitscentrale uit te blazen, men heeft al voorzien dat die dingen een groot probleem gaan vormen om te ontmantelen. En die éne hebben ze tenslotte opgetakeld, de Koersk.quote:Op zaterdag 5 maart 2005 22:23 schreef HarigeKerel het volgende:
Tja, er liggen ook nog altijd een paar atoomonderzeeers te roesten op de bodem, da's ook niet zo fijn
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