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Cement factories destroy
town in southern Vietnam
Dust clouds the air around one of five cement factories
operating in Kien Luong town in the southern Vietnamese
“It makes no difference whether you
wash your face or not. Even your bike is dusty after a short ride,” one said.
Five cement factories built within a
ten kilometers radius has heavily thickened the air above the capitol of the
namesake district in
In addition to the tedious task of
constantly wiping floors and faces, the ever-present dust has allegedly left
many in the town sick.
Tran Quoc Vu, who lives near Kien
Luong Cement Factory, demonstrated the extent of the problem by sweeping half
a kilograms of dust off his ten square meter floor.
“That much dust falls in just one
night. So how much cement have we inhaled after all these years?” Vu cried.
One local said they used to consider
the dust a blessing. To make a little money, you need only sweep into a bag
it and sell it.
Now many call the dust “unbearable”
and use a Vietnamese expression that describes the town as a place that's
hard to breath.
Cement factory dust coats trees and
roofs all over town.
Sometimes meals when a family fails
to close their doors tightly enough, it ends up coating their meals
Trees have withered in the dust.
The owner of footwear shop said she
has to clean her merchandise every day to prevent it from looking used.
Tong Quang Quyen, a local man, said
the factories' investors know well about extent of the damage since most of
their senior advisers built homes far from the factories.
“They don’t have to inhale the dust
every day like us,” Quyen said, referring to one such adviser who built a
home five kilometers from the nearest factory.
Thanh Nien reporters
were directed to visit the home but the people living there refused to
receive them.
Locals have recently sent complaints
to different government agencies citing high rates of people suffering and
dying from respiratory conditions.
Nguyen Van Tuyen, a local town official,
said their recent survey of around 2,800 people residents of a single 1.5km
stretch of the town found that nearly 40 members had died of cancer, mostly
of the lungs and throat.
“That is an unofficial figure, the
real one could be bigger,” Tuyen said.
Doctor Huynh Quyet Thang, vice
chairman of the Vietnam Oncology Association, called the rate “terrible.”
Thang said environmental damage is
inevitable in the areas around cement factories; those impacts, he added,
could lead to diseases such as lung and respiratory inflammation.
Asbestos, a fibrous mineral found in
many kinds of rock including those used in cement production, and radon – the
radioactive element found in rock and soil-- can cause cancer, Thang said.
Dang Kim Thanh, vice chairman of the
district, said he has been informed of the health situation and has ordered
the district medical center to assist locals.
A
And leave the factories
alone?
Kien Luong Cement Factory had been
operating in the area for some time before the authorities decided to
establish a residential area around it.
But authorities deviated from the
plan by allowing four additional cement factories to open in the area,
including the giant Holcim Factory backed by Swiss investment.
The factories have eaten into
limestone mountains, many of which were valued for their historical and
scenic properties.
With locals accusing the factories
of discharging untreated emissions, Lam Hoang Sa, vice chairman of the
province, said the factories' environmental pollution stems from their use of
outdated technology.
“Only the technology at Holcim is
relatively acceptable,” Sa said.
On August 28, a Thanh Nien reporter witnessed
raw concrete materials being transported from the factory to barges without
being covered.
Wind blew the dust all over the air.
Doctor Nguyen Dinh Hoe, the general
secretary of
Hoe said it seems like the
environmental ministry and the provincial authorities haven't done a proper
job of assessing the environmental impact of such a large number of cement
factories before licensing them.
Colonel Pham Trung Thanh, spokesman
of Kien Giang Police, disagrees.
“The pollution has not reached a
point that merits punishment,” he said, adding that they've asked the factory
to clean up their production.
Doan Huu Thang, head of the
environment division of Kien Giang Natural Resources and Environment
Department, also expressed sympathy for the factories.
“They will have to invest a large
sum of money (in treatment and the like), and haven't been able to do that
yet.”
Thang specifically defended Kien
Luong Cement Factory, formerly called Ha Tien 2, as saying that it has
improved a lot compared to the past.
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Thứ Ba, 9 tháng 9, 2014
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