 |
| Somali men walk past unidentified
garbage washed on to the beach in Hafun in north eastern
Somalia |
Late last month, a U.N. report
highlighted some serious health problems plaguing people in northern
Somalia in the Horn of Africa. The problems came to light in
early January after a massive tsunami from Asia brought to shore
broken hazardous waste containers, which may have been dumped off
the coast of Somalia for more than a decade. Allegations of
waste dumping by European companies have existed for years.
The tsunami that hit the coast of Somalia in late December did
more than level villages and kill hundreds of people. It also
churned up a secret that some must have hoped would remain forever
buried at sea.
Nick Nuttall of the U.N. Environment Program in Nairobi explains
that as the wave receded, residents living along Somalia's northern
coast noticed dozens of rusting steel drums, barrels, and other
containers deposited on their beaches.
Smashed open by the force of the wave, Mr. Nuttal says the
containers exposed a frightening activity that has been going on for
more than a decade.
"Somalia has been used as a dumping ground for hazardous waste
starting about the early 1990s and continuing through the civil war
there,” he noted. “European companies found it to be very
cheap to get rid of waste there, costing as little as $2.50 a ton
where disposal costs in Europe are something like $250 a ton.
And the waste is many different kinds. There is uranium
radioactive waste. There is leads. There is heavy metals
like cadmium and mercury. There is industrial waste and there
is hospital wastes, chemical wastes. You name it," said Mr.
Nuttal.
Since the containers came ashore, hundreds of local people have
fallen ill, suffering from mouth and abdominal bleeding, skin
infections, and other ailments.
A senior scientist with Greenpeace Research Laboratories in Great
Britain, David Santillo, says while it would be difficult to prove
that exposure to industrial waste is the sole cause of such health
problems, he believes there is a link.
"It could well be that some of those health effects are a result
of exposure to radioactive material and in that case, for some
people, regrettably, the prognosis could be very devastating,” he
explained. “There could be people who simply would not
recover."
Warnings about a potential health and environmental disaster from
illegal waste dumping began circulating as early as 1992, a year
after a coalition of Somali warlords overthrew the government of
dictator Mohammed Siad Barre and turned the country into a violent,
lawless state.
At the time, a UNEP official in Nairobi, Mustafa Kamal Tolba,
told reporters that he was convinced that European firms were
dumping hazardous waste in Somalia because there was no government
to stop such activities. But Mr. Tolba declined to name the
companies.
A Brussels-based Somali environmental activist, Amina Mohammed,
tells VOA that an Italian television journalist named Ilaria Alpi
soon took up the investigation. But in 1994, Ms. Alpi and her
cameraman were killed while traveling in Somalia.
Ms. Mohammed says she believes the journalist was
assassinated.
"She was killed because there were many things that she
discovered,” he explained. “There are Italian companies.
There is the Mafia. There are Somali warlords. There is
a whole range of people, dealers, and brokers involved in this
task."
Ms. Mohammed says the journalist had been investigating
allegations that Mafia-run companies in Italy were regularly
transporting industrial waste to Somalia for dumping. The
organized crime group is estimated to control about 30 percent of
Italy's waste disposal companies, including those that deal with
toxic waste.
Ms. Mohammed says Ms. Alpi discovered that much of the waste was
being carried from Italy to its former colony aboard fishing vessels
belonging to a company called the Somali High Sea Fishing
Company.
"This company was owned by the Somali government and it is now in
the hands of a manager who is also presently a member of
parliament,” she added. “His name is Munye Said Omar. He
is presently in Yemen and all the boats are in Yemen harbor."
Ms. Mohammed says the television journalist had evidence proving
that the warlord was using some of the money generated from waste
dumping to purchase arms to fuel the country's civil war.
In 1998, one of Italy's largest weekly magazines, Famiglia
Cristiana, alleged that although most of the waste dumping took
place after the start of the civil war in 1991, the activity
actually began as early as 1989 under the former regime.
It is not known whether illegal dumping is still taking place in
Somalia. The Bahrain-based, multi-national maritime force
patrolling the waters off the Horn of Africa as part of a U.S.-led
counter-terrorism effort, tells VOA that it has not observed any
such activity in recent years.
Even so, Greenpeace scientist David Santillo says the tsunami
disaster has shown that the dumping problem in Somalia deserves
urgent, global attention.
"There is quite a lot that can be done, with the expertise, with
the equipment that may not be available immediately to Somalia but
would be available if there was a real international effort to
survey the areas where this dumping is supposed to have happened and
to try, as far as possible, to recover those materials, so that they
are not a time bomb for the future," he noted.
Environmentalists say another urgent need is for a central
government in Somalia, which can take responsibility for
safeguarding its long coastline, but that may be years away.
In October, a transitional government for Somalia was cobbled
together in neighboring Kenya. But its leaders have not been
able to move to the Somali capital, Mogadishu, because of security
threats.