The Lebanese Center for Human Rights (CLDH) is a local non-profit, non-partisan Lebanese human rights organization in Beirut that was established by the Franco-Lebanese Movement SOLIDA (Support for Lebanese Detained Arbitrarily) in 2006. SOLIDA has been active since 1996 in the struggle against arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance and the impunity of those perpetrating gross human violations.

Search This Blog

February 17, 2012

The Daily Star - Dye dumped by factory colored Beirut River red, February 17, 2012



By Van Meguerditchian

BEIRUT: Preliminary investigations concluded Thursday that water pouring into the southern bank of Beirut River was mixed with a dye dumped by a nearby factory, giving it the mysterious red color a day earlier.
Laboratory tests of samples from the river indicated that the source of the coloration of the water was not due to dumping from a slaughterhouse but dye wastes dumped by a factory in either Hazmieh or Baabda, an official at the Environment Ministry, Saad Elias, told The Daily Star Thursday.
“Preliminary results of the tests indicated that there were no traces of blood in the water but some color substance, but we are still unsure as to which type it is,” Elias said, adding that it was probably the result of dumping by a fabric dye factory.
Elias said that the ministry decided to refer the samples to laboratories at the American University of Beirut for further examination. “The samples were taken to the laboratories of AUB to help us indicate the source of the coloration ... the tests will take between six and seven days.”
At dawn Wednesday, the Beirut River mysteriously turned blood red after a stream of unidentified red liquid began pouring into it. The red water then flowed into the Mediterranean Sea.
While government and local officials visited the scene to investigate, the source of the coloration remained elusive because of the complex structure of the sewage networks in the area.
Elias, who is an adviser to Environment Minister Nazem Khoury, said the ministry held multiple contacts Thursday with all Internal Security Forces and the mayors of Hazmieh and Baabda to speed up the investigation into the illegal dumping of dye into the river.
The ISF was assigned by the Beirut Prosecutor Wednesday to carry out an investigation and hold the party responsible for the crime accountable.
“But the Environment Ministry does not have the judicial and security prerogatives to press hard on the issue ... we have to wait for the investigation to end to take action,” said Elias.
According to security sources, the AUB tests will be crucial to the course of the investigation. “Once the tests on the samples are completed, police could use the results to aid them in the search for the source of the colored water and the street it originated from,” the source added.
Elias echoed the security source, saying the ministry would wait for final results next week to make an official statement on the incident.
But the technical limitations of the Environment Ministry might delay investigations into the dumping of the substance. Environmental experts have warned that the incident could have catastrophic effects on the local ecosystem if the substance is discovered to be industrial.
Officials at the Environment Ministry say experts will be able to identify whether the substance is industrial or organic once tests conclude next week.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Archives