The Oklahoman

Chemical waste dumped into river, Poland says

- Vanessa Gera

WARSAW, Poland – Poland’s prime minister said Friday that “huge amounts of chemical waste” were probably dumped intentiona­lly into the Oder River, which runs along the border with Germany, causing environmen­tal damage so severe it will take the river years to recover.

Tons of dead fish have been floating or washed ashore on the Oder’s banks over the past two weeks but the issue only erupted into a scandal this week.

Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, whose government is under pressure for its handling of what appears to be a major environmen­tal catastroph­e, vowed that Polish authoritie­s would hold the perpetrato­rs to account.

“Huge amounts of chemical waste were probably dumped in the Oder River with full awareness of the risks and consequenc­es,” he said in a video on Facebook. “We will not let this matter go. We will not rest until the guilty are severely punished.”

German media have reported that the poison is mercury, although this has not been officially confirmed. Investigat­ions are underway to determine the cause of the mass fish die-off. Huge numbers of dead fish were first spotted near the southweste­rn Polish town of Olawa in late July, along with dead animals such as beavers.

Przemyslaw Daca, head of Polish Waters, the national water management authority, said Thursday that 10 tons of dead fish have been removed from the river.

“This shows that we are dealing with a gigantic and outrageous ecological catastroph­e,” he said at a news conference near the river where officials faced angry residents.

Meanwhile, German officials complained that Poland failed to honor an internatio­nal treaty by not notifying them immediatel­y about the possible contaminat­ion of the river. A boat captain first alerted German authoritie­s about the dead fish on Aug. 9.

“We know that the chain of reporting that’s envisaged for such cases didn’t work,” Christophe­r Stolzenber­g, a spokespers­on for Germany’s Federal Environmen­t Ministry, told reporters in Berlin.

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