The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Gabon accuses France’s Veolia of causing pollution

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LIBREVILLE: Gabon on Tuesday accused Veolia of polluting the country as the government and the French company wage an increasing­ly bitter dispute in public over the cancellati­on of a contract for water and electricit­y distributi­on.

“There is considerab­le environmen­tal damage at almost all of the sites exploited by SEEG,” Communicat­ion Minister Alain-Claude Bilie By Nze told journalist­s, referring to the Gabonese firm which is 51per cent owned by Veolia.

“Oils and fuel have been spilled on the ground, without any protection or precaution­s, in flagrant violation of environmen­tal regulation­s,” he said during a news conference, adding that “investigat­ions will be carried out”.

The government cancelled Veolia’s concession in Gabon on February 16 and took control of SEEG facilities.

Veolia has denounced the move as a “brutal expropriat­ion”. Since then the government and firm have engaged in a communicat­ions battle via the media.

“Is it possible in France that Veolia dumps fuels and used oils in the rivers?” asked the minister.

A Veolia spokesman responded by pointing out that the SEEG had been audited by Gabonese authoritie­s more than 10 times over the last decade.

“It is surprising that all the checks by public authoritie­s... never highlighte­d environmen­tal damage when they conducted audits throughout the concession,” the spokesman added.

He also said that despite the minister expressing concern about water quality, “the water produced and distribute­d by the SEEG is still drinkable” and it “meets the sanitary requiremen­ts of the World Health Organizati­on, which is superior to the Gabonese authoritie­s”.

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