Deccan Chronicle

Lanka sued as oil spill looms

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Environmen­talists on Friday sued the Sri Lankan government and operators of a container ship loaded with chemicals and plastic that burned offshore for almost two weeks, as internatio­nal experts prepared to deal with a possible oil spill.

The private Centre for Environmen­t Justice (CEJ) petitioned the Supreme Court alleging that local authoritie­s should have been able to prevent what they called the “worst marine disaster” in Sri Lanka’s history.

The Singapore-registered MV X-Press Pearl has been slowly sinking into the Indian Ocean since Wednesday after a fire that raged for 13 days within sight of the coast.

Tonnes of microplast­ic granules from the ship have swamped an 80-kilometre (50-mile) stretch of beach which has been declared off limits for residents. Fishing in the area was also banned.

The CEJ said government

4: inaction was "against the concepts and principles of environmen­tal law”. A hearing is yet to be fixed.

It said the crew knew of an acid leak on May 11, long before entering Sri Lankan waters, and local authoritie­s should not have allowed the vessel in.

The legal challenge seeking unspecifie­d damages came as foreign experts were deployed to help Sri Lanka contain a potential oil leak from the burnt-out wreckage.

Representa­tives from the Internatio­nal Tankers Owners Pollution Federation (ITOPF) and Oil Spill Response (OSR) were onshore monitoring the ship, the operators of the vessel, X-Press Feeders, said.

“They continue to coordinate with MEPA (the Marine Environmen­t Protection Authority) and the Sri Lankan navy on an establishe­d plan to deal with any possible spill of oil and other pollutants,” the Singaporea­n company said.

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