Formosa unit suspected of burying untreated waste in central
Vietnam
Authorities
in the central province of Ha Tinh said they are looking into allegations
that a unit of Taiwanese firm Formosa buried industrial waste in a private
farm with the help of the property's owner.
The scandal came as Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corp. (FHS) is still
struggling with a public relations disaster following mass fish deaths in the
central region.
Vo Ta Dinh, director of the provincial Department of Natural
Resources and Environment, said Tuesday that authorities had unearthed around
100 tons of muddy waste allegedly disposed of by FHS in a farm.
The farm, which grows mostly banana and cajuput trees, is owned by Le Quang Hoa, the director of
state-owned Urban
Environment Company in Ky Anh Town.
Dinh said samples of the waste were collected for testing.
Authorities also confiscated equipment used to bury the waste
after inspecting the farm on Monday.
According to local police, Hoa’s company signed a contract to
transport waste from the construction site of a new FHS steel factory to two
licensed waste treatment plants in the province.
The questions that investigators will try to answer are why the waste ended up in Hoa’s farm and
whether it is toxic.
Hoa told Thanh
Nien the
waste was not toxic and that trees could grow on it.
FHS, a subsidiary of Taiwan's Formosa Plastics, has been in
hot water over the past two months after an estimated 70 tons of fish were
found dead and washed ashore in April in four central Vietnamese provinces Ha
Tinh, Quang Binh, Quang Tri and Thua Thien-Hue. It was accused of discharging
toxic waste into the sea.
FHS accepted
responsibility for the environmental disaster and promised to pay US$500
million in compensation late last month.
Experts believe it will take years, if not decades, before the
regional marine environment can fully recover from the toxic spill.
|
Thứ Ba, 12 tháng 7, 2016
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