The Borneo Post

Greece fumbled oil spill response — Environmen­t groups

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ATHENS: Greek officials fumbled their response to a minor oil spill that is now threatenin­g beaches near Athens five days after the suspicious sinking of a tanker, environmen­tal groups said yesterday.

“This leak happened near the country’s biggest harbour, just miles away from the operation centre of the ministry tasked with addressing such disasters,” Dimitris Ibrahim, campaign director at Greenpeace Greece, told news portal in.gr.

Adding insult to injury, the amount of oil in question was “relatively small,” Ibrahim said.

The oil spill on Sunday compromise­d beaches on the island of Salamis and officials were confident that it could be contained given mild wind conditions.

But by yesterday, parts of the slick had drifted miles away to the Athens coastal resort of Glyfada and was threatenin­g the popular beaches of Voula and Vouliagmen­i.

WWF Greece was likewise incredulou­s that “a country with heavy tankers traffic has proven unable to protect its beaches from an initially small- scale incident.”

“Nobody thought the slick would reach us,” Glyfada mayor Yiorgos Papanikola­ou told Skai TV.

“If someone had warned us even on Tuesday, we would have taken precaution­s,” said Papanikola­ou.

“We must act quickly to prevent long-term damage,” Mayors across the coast have issued beach warnings and fishermen have been advised to avoid the area at present.

Merchant marine minister Panagiotis Kouroublis, who was attending a shipping conference in London – and is under fire for not interrupti­ng the trip – is visiting the area.

He insists that every available resource has been thrown at the oil slick.

“A giant operation is under way,” he told state agency ANA.

“Everything will be clean in 20-25 days.”

The European Union has contribute­d an anti-pollution ship.

The 45-year- old vessel Agia Zoni II sank on Sunday near the island of Salamis while under anchor. The cause is still unknown. The Greek-flagged tanker was carrying around 2,500 tonnes of fuel. — AFP

 ??  ?? Workers clean a beach covered with oil that leaked from a small oil tanker that sank on Sept 10 off the shores of Salamina island, at the suburb of Faliro in Athens, Greece. — Reuters photo
Workers clean a beach covered with oil that leaked from a small oil tanker that sank on Sept 10 off the shores of Salamina island, at the suburb of Faliro in Athens, Greece. — Reuters photo

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