Province may have overstepped with
controversial project on Vietnam's main river
Materials are dumped into the
State officials have expressed their concerns about a property
project that is filling up a part of
Toan
Thinh Phat Company in the southern
Bui Cach Tuyen, Vice Minister
of Natural Resources and Environment, said he only learned about
the project from local media.
Tuyen said he was not consulted either as a
vice minister or a vice chairman of Dong Nai River Basin Protection
Committee, a government-appointed advisory body.
“The government of
Le Thanh Cung, the committee's chairman,
also said he knew nothing about the project until reading it on local
newspapers this week.
Main water source
Dong Nai is the longest river within
It supports nearly 20 million people and is
a main water source for people in southern
Experts have warned that the new project
will cause erosion, change the current and pollute water in the river.
Hoang Van Bay, director of the Water
Management Department at the environment ministry, said any rivers and
streams in
The project has raised many questions
because it not only goes against regulations of waterway protection but also
shows
The province has never allowed any
construction activity near the river and used to work hard to protect it from
several hydropower plant projects.
'Blood veins'
Vu Ngoc Long, director of the Southern
Institute of Ecology, said that the provincial government “is contradicting
itself.”
Long said the filling is destructive just
like a hydropower dam.
The construction will damage the river’s
ecological system and then people living at the project may discharge waste
directly into the river, he said.
A poor community who is living along the
river and directly depends on its resources will lose their livelihood, Long
said, adding that he was sorry to hear about the project.
The
expert warned that without enough water from Dong Nai, the neighboring HCMC
will struggle.
The brackish ecology at HCMC's Can Gio
District will disappear as the water will turn salty, he said.
Le Anh Tuan, a climate change expert and an
adviser of Vietnam Rivers Network, said
“Filling the river is exactly like
restricting the veins that keep a body alive,” Tuan said.
Thanh Nien News
|
Thứ Năm, 19 tháng 3, 2015
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