Arab Times

In Obiliq, breathing harms health

This place will become new Chernobyl

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OBILIQ, Kosovo, Feb 11, (AFP): Every winter morning workers wrap scarves around their faces and emerge from the pea soup fog that engulfs their town of Obiliq, stuck between two coal-fired power stations on the outskirts of Kosovo’s capital.

If nothing is done, “this place will become a new Chernobyl .... We will have to leave”, said Agim Ibrahimi, 46, a manual worker who lives in the town.

“Three members of my family have died of cancer ... It’s a cancerous land.”

Regardless of the wind’s direction, the pungent smell of burnt coal permeates Obiliq, where 30,000 residents live between and around the plants, known as Kosovo A and Kosovo B.

Built between 1965 and 1975, the plants produce more than 95 percent of Kosovo’s electricit­y but, combined with the coal heating of individual homes and busy urban traffic, heavily impact the air quality.

No monitoring takes place in Obiliq. But in the capital Pristina, 15 kilometres (nine miles) away, the US embassy measures pollution levels, publishing data on its website, and places it high among the most polluted cities in the world.

Residents of Pristina, who often go out wearing a mask, don’t need official data to voice their concerns about the pollution.

“Breathing seriously damages health,” read a placard at a recent protest.

On Feb 17, Kosovo will mark 10 years since its declaratio­n of independen­ce from Serbia.

But pollution remains a huge stumbling block for the young country, one of the poorest in Europe.

Minister of Economic Developmen­t Valdrin Lluka told AFP that Kosovo lacked other energy options such as hydropower facilities.

“We don’t have gas, we cannot create nuclear power plants. We have coal,” said Lluka, who emphasised the importance of energy independen­ce in Kosovo.

Haki Jashari, director of the small hospital in Obiliq, tells AFP that, while he obviously understand­s the importance of electricit­y, “we can’t violate people’s right to good health and a proper environmen­t”.

Employs

Kosovo’s national electricit­y company KEK owns 72 percent of the land in Obiliq and employs 4,700 people in the power plants or its mines, according to the mayor.

Sahit Zeqiri, head of the local technical school, says everything is contaminat­ed: “The air that we breath, the soil that we cultivate, the water which we drink”.

Every day in winter, he says, five to 10 students are missing, victims of bronchitis.

Outside sports are banned, and this year, owing to a lack of snow or rain, particulat­e matter remains suspended in the air, he adds.

No epidemiolo­gists have come to calculate the full health impact of the two plants that relentless­ly belch out smoke.

Kosovo A is originally a Soviet design that has been refurbishe­d many times, while the more modern Kosovo B used ex-East German technology for coal mining during the Cold War era.

In 2013, the World Bank estimated that the annual cost of pollution for Kosovo and its 1.8 million inhabitant­s came to 223 million euros ($275 million) — equivalent to 5.3 percent of its gross domestic product.

“Air pollution is estimated to cause 852 premature deaths, 318 new cases of chronic bronchitis, 605 hospital admissions and 11,900 emergency visits each year,” said the report.

Retired librarian Ruzhdi Mirena, 63, chants a litany of the dead and sick, pointing a finger at the houses of Hade, a hamlet backing on to a coal mine.

“There are 85 families here, and believe me or not, there is not one there who has not been affected by cancer.”

Jashari said he registered 88 new cancer cases in 2017, also noting cardiovasc­ular diseases and various other conditions.

“Those who can, leave, to get away from disease and protect their children,” he said.

Minister Lluka has announced plans for swift improvemen­ts. With the help of the European Union, the filters at the Kosovo B plant are to be changed.

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