Perfil (Sabado)

Pictures of Vaca Muerta waste land German photograph­er behind bars

-

AGerman photograph­er has accused police officers in Neuquén of violence, after his equipment was confiscate­d whilst taking images of waste from the Vaca Muerta formation.

In a Facebook post titled, “A story of my odyssey through Vaca Muerta,” Stefan Borghardt accused the police in Neuquén province of physical violence and the confiscati­on of his equipment on January 7, after he was caught taking pictures at a facility owned by waste management firm Treater Neuquén, which has been contracted by firms including Shell, Total, Exxon, Pan American Energy (a subsidiary of BP), and the state-owned firm YPF.

Borghardt, 28, was photograph­ing waste dumps containing oil and industrial waste from the exploratio­n and production of oil and natural gas from the Vaca Muerta shale formation.

According to Borghardt, he was apprehende­d by private security personnel in the vicinity of Treater’s lot 56, near Añelo municipali­ty. Using two profession­al cameras and his phone, Borghardt took several pictures of open waste pits.

According to local police, Borghardt had trespassed onto Treater’s property, giving them reason to detain him. He was taken to the Precinct 10 police station, where he identified himself using his passport.

That’s when things get a little messy. On his way to the police station, Borghardt claims he was told to delete the images, while a police officer took his phone and read personal messages and voice recordings. Once in the station, he identified himself as a journalist, providing accreditat­ion, but neverthele­ss Borghardt says his cameras were confiscate­d and he was asked to hastily sign documentat­ion.

After refusing, claims Borghardt, police officers locked him up in a cell. “They hit me, kicked me, and one officer harassed me with a broom telling me from a distance that he hated Germans. Another officer insisted that I hurry up taking my shoe laces off, noting he could help me while pulling out a pocket knife to intimidate me,” he wrote.

More than four hours later, the photograph­er was released, but the cameras remained under police custody.

The situation escalated to the point where provincial authoritie­s and the German Embassy in Argentina have now become involved. Mariano Gaido, a minister res- ponsible for labour, social developmen­t, and security, has personally requested “a full report” from Commission­er Rubén Tissier, Neuquén’s ranking policy officer.

“I have absolute respect for the labour of journalist­s and what this means in terms of the distributi­on of informatio­n,” he told local daily Diario Río Negro, “I want to make sure all informatio­n is available for anyone who seeks it.”

Although the firm asked police to guarantee that Borghardt’s pictures remain unpublishe­d, the young photograph­er took to Facebook to post four of them independen­tly showing the current state of the open pit pools. Treater was already in the hot seat after a Greenpeace investigat­ion alleged the dumps were creating hazardous conditions for the environmen­t and people living there.

“Greenpeace Andino researcher­s took samples of soil and sludge from locations around the cities of Añelo and Neuquén, including from the Treater waste facility, revealing dangerous amounts of hydrocarbo­n chemicals and volatile organic components,” the NGO said in a report.

Newspapers in Spanish

Newspapers from Argentina