Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka seeks compensati­on for dumping of garbage here

- By Nadia Fazlulhaq

The Ministry of Environmen­t has written to the Secretaria­t of the Basel Convention in Switzerlan­d on seeking compensati­on from relevant parties involved in bringing down 263 containers of waste from the United Kingdom, thereby violating the "Basel Convention for the Transbound­ary Movement of Hazardous Waste." Both the UK and Sri Lanka have ratified this treaty.

This week the Court of Appeal ordered the Central Environmen­tal Authority (CEA) and the Customs to make arrangemen­ts to ship back the remaining 242 containers to the UK.

Last month, in the presence of the Director General of Customs, 21 freight containers out of the total 263 were re-shipped following orders by the Courts. Initially there were 130 ( 40 feet) containers at the Katunayake Investment Zone, but after opening up, the waste was stored in 330 (20 feet) containers at Katunayake while the remaining were at the Colombo Port.

The CEA’s Hazardous Waste and Chemical Management Unit Director Ajith Weerawarde­na said they were waiting for a response from the Basel Secretaria­t on the compensati­on for violating the convention, and

based on that legal action would be taken under the National Environmen­t Act as well.

“We need to know whether the Government of the United Kingdom and or relevant parties that imported the waste should be held responsibl­e for this,” he said.

Meanwhile, the environmen­t group that filed a petition over the importing of waste containers, Centre for Environmen­tal Justice ( CEJ) was urging authoritie­s to track down the ship and assure that the containers reach the UK as ordered by the Courts.

“Basel action network members in Malaysia, the Philippine­s and Indonesia have expressed concern that there is a possibilit­y of the waste being retained in Asia. They are pressing us to make sure the waste shipments reach the UK as assured by authoritie­s,” said CEJ’s Executive Director

Hemantha Vithanage.

He said the organisati­on has asked the authoritie­s to provide it with container numbers to make sure these containers reach the UK.

“We are tracking the container ship Seamax Norwalk that is carrying the 21 containers of waste and it is now heading towards Barcelona after stopping at Mundra port at Gujarat in India. But it is important to track down the containers to make sure they reach the UK,” he said.

Mr. Vithanage said the waste included used cushions and mattresses, clinical waste and plastic waste, that could threaten public health and bio diversity. Therefore legal action could be taken against the importers under the National Environmen­t Act and the Customs Ordinance.

He said CEJ lawyers had received a confirmati­on by the

I n t e r n a t i o n a l Wa s t e Shipments division of the UK’s Environmen­t Agency stating its willingnes­s to accept the waste containers and that it would work with the CEA and the Customs on the repatriati­on of the containers.

Cutsoms Deputy Director Aqthar Hassen told the Sunday Times that a Customs inquiry had begun while the re-shipping process was to begin.

“Once the Customs inquiry is completed, it will be decided what action will be taken under the Customs Ordinance,” he said.

Mr Hassen said the ship carrying the 21 containers was being monitored.

“There is no way to release these containers in any other port without shipping documents. We are monitoring the shipping route,” he said.

Meanwhile in Colombo, the British High Commission said it would help assist the repatriati­on process where needed.

“The UK is committed to tackling the illegal export of waste. The UK Environmen­t Agency is in close contact with its counterpar­ts in Sri Lanka to ensure the remaining waste containers are repatriate­d as soon as it is practicabl­e,” the High Commission said.

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 ??  ?? The waste that had been imported from the UK
The waste that had been imported from the UK

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