Dead dolphins, oil spill cause uproar in streets
JOHANNESBURG— Honking and drumming, tens of thousands protested Saturday in Mauritius over the government’s slow response to an oil spill froma grounded Japanese ship and the alarming discovery of dozens of dead dolphins in recent days.
Outraged over the Indian Ocean island nation’sworst environmental disaster in years, protesters displayed signs such as “You have no shame” and “I’ve seen better Cabinets at IKEA.” “Inaction,” oneprotester scrawled on an inflatable dolphin held above the crowd.
They marched peacefully through the capital, Port Louis, a month after the ship struck a coral reef a mile offshore. It later cracked under thepounding surfandspilled around 1,000 tons of fuel oil into fragile marine areas.
“It’s clearwe are at a turning point in the history of our country,” a commentary in the LeMauriciennewspaper said, as residents said the demonstration could politicize a broader section of the population.
Addressing the crowd in Port Louis, some speakers called for topofficials to step down. There was no immediate governmentcomment. Other protestswere reported outside the Mauritius High Commission in London and in Paris and Perth, Australia.
“I’d be surprised if it’s not close to 100,000” people who attended the march, local writer Khalil Cassimally said. Public demonstrations aren’tcommoninMauritius, but “one of the things that really binds people together is the sea,” he said. “It’s one of the jewels of this country, and everyone feels very passionately about this.”
Another protest is planned on Sept. 12 in Mahebourg, one of the most affected coastal villages, Cassimally said.
Mauritius depends heavily on tourism, and the spill has been a severe blow on top of the effects of the coronavirus pandemic, which has limited international travel.
Authorities on Friday said at least 39 dead dolphins have washed ashore but it’s not yet clear what killed them. The government said no fuel oil was found in two necropsies so far and called the deaths a “sad coincidence.”
Civil society groups should be present as necropsies continue, and independent experts should give a second opinion, localenvironmental group Eco-Sud said Friday.
Some exper t s fear water-soluble chemicals in the fuel are to blame.
“Something that is also concerning is that we don’t know the possible longterm effects. The oil is a new low-sulfur fuel oil that is being introducedtoreduce air pollution,” Jacqueline Sauzier with the Mauritius MarineConservation Society told the journal Nature this
week. “This is the first time that type of oil has spilled, so there have been no longtermstudiesontheimpacts.”
Residents and environmentalists have demanded investigations into why the MV Wakashio strayed miles off course. Its captain and first officer have been arrested and charged with “endangering safe navigation.”
The ship ran aground on July 25 and began leaking fuel Aug. 6 into the Mahebourg Lagoon, fouling a protected wetlands area and a small island that was a bird and wildlife sanctuary.
Thousands of civilian volunteers worked for days to try to minimize the damage, creating makeshift oil barriers by stuffing fabric bags with sugar cane leaves and empty plastic bottles to keep them afloat. Environmental workers carefully ferried dozens of baby tortoises and rare plants to shore, plucking some trapped seabirds out of the goo.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth blamed badweather for the government’s slowresponse. Multiple investigations are underway.