Kuwait Times

Oil spill clean-up on Brazilian beaches making volunteers sick

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RECIFE: Volunteers flocking to the Brazilian shore to clean up the mysterious oil polluting more than 100 northeaste­rn beaches are getting ill from collecting the toxic sludge without the proper equipment, health authoritie­s said on Friday. After oil slicks washed up beaches along more than 2,000 kilometers of tropical coastline, hundreds of people have turned out to clean the beaches, many using their bare hands and feet for lack of gloves, boots or even masks to block the fumes.

“I had nausea and diarrhea the next day, and a splitting headache,” said Vera Lucia Silva, a local government clerk who said she and a friend collected 80 kg (176 lbs) oil with their hands into plastic bags on the Itapuama beach south of Recife. Silva, who ended up on a drip in the local infirmary, said local authoritie­s provided no equipment and after two days several charity groups appeared and handed out masks and boots.

The thick sludge has been washing up for nearly two months, and authoritie­s and experts have been baffled by its origin. It is believed to be Venezuelan crude but there is no evidence of how it entered the open ocean. A patchwork coalition of volunteers, public employees and armed forces have taken to the beaches to save turtles and other wildlife, collecting the gummy oil into bags with varying levels of training and support.

The Pernambuco state health department said on Thursday that 19 people had been treated in hospital for intoxicati­on either from direct contact with the oil or from the solvents being used to dilute it in the cleanup efforts. Local media reported that hundreds more had reported symptoms but not sought treatment.

Gerald Graham, a Canadian oil-spill response expert, said the authoritie­s should be keeping people off the beaches if they were not trained and equipped because exposure to the oil was very hazardous and could cause injury or even death. “The government’s response has been really pathetic. They were not there. Why did they take so long to act,” he said in a telephone interview. Brazil’s government has said it followed standard protocols since the start of the environmen­tal disaster. Because the heavy crude does not float on the ocean surface like most oil slicks, officials said that traditiona­l methods of keeping it off the shore have been ineffectiv­e. On Friday, Tourism Minister Marcelo Alvaro Antonio visited Porto de Galinhas, a tourist hotspot in Pernambuco. He dipped his feet in the sea to show that Brazil’s beaches were clean and open for business, with less than 10% affected by the oil. — Reuters

 ??  ?? CABO DE SANTO AGOSTINHO, Brazil: A boy walks out of the sea while removing oil spilled on Itapuama beach on Oct 21, 2019. — AFP
CABO DE SANTO AGOSTINHO, Brazil: A boy walks out of the sea while removing oil spilled on Itapuama beach on Oct 21, 2019. — AFP

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