Kuwait Times

Mauritius struggles to contain oil spill polluting its seas

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PORT LOUIS, Mauritius: Police in Mauritius yesterday prepared to board a grounded ship leaking tonnes of oil into its crystal-clear waters, as clean-up crews confronted a growing ecological disaster on the archipelag­o’s pristine shores. The bulk carrier MV Wakashio has been seeping fuel into a protected marine park boasting unspoiled coral reefs, mangrove forests and endangered species, prompting Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth to declare an environmen­tal emergency and appeal for internatio­nal help.

Attempts to stabilize the stricken vessel, which ran aground on July 25 but only started leaking oil this week, and pump 4,000 tons of fuel from its hold have failed, and local authoritie­s fear rough seas could further rupture the tanker. Hundreds of volunteers, many smeared head-to-toe in black sludge, are marshaling along the coastline, stringing together miles of makeshift cordons in a desperate attempt to hold back the oily tide.

But already, thick muck has inundated the island nation’s unspoiled lagoons, marine habitats and white-sand beaches, causing unpreceden­ted damage to the fragile coastal ecosystem upon which Mauritius and its economy relies. “People have realized that they need to take things into their hands. We are here to protect our fauna and flora,” said Ashok Subron, an environmen­tal activist at Mahebourg, one of the worst-hit areas.

Police said yesterday they would execute a search warrant granted by a Mauritius court to board the Wakashio and seize items of interest, including the ship’s log book and communicat­ion exchanges, as part of its investigat­ion into the accident. The ship’s captain, a 58-year-old Indian national, will accompany officers on the search, police officials said. Twenty crew members evacuated safely from the Japaneseow­ned but Panamanian-flagged ship when it ran aground are under surveillan­ce.

Prime Minister Jugnauth thanked France for dispatchin­g a naval vessel, military aircraft and technical experts from nearby Reunion, a French Indian Ocean island, to assist with the disaster. He has convened an crisis committee yesterday, and has expressed concern that forecast bad weather could further complicate efforts to stymie the spill, and cause more structural damage to the vessel.

The opposition has called for the resignatio­n of the country’s environmen­t and fisheries ministers, as pressure mounts on the government to explain why more wasn’t done to prepare in the two weeks since the ship ran aground. Mitsui OSK Lines, which operates the vessel owned by another Japanese company, said efforts to place containmen­t booms near the ship had been unsuccessf­ul due to high waves. Helicopter­s had been shifting some of the 3,800 tons of fuel and 2,000 tons of diesel to land.

Aerial images show the enormous scale of the damage, with huge stretches of azure seas around the marooned cargo ship stained a deep inky black, and the region’s fabled lagoons and inlets clouded over. The Wakashio struck a reef at Pointe d’Esny, an ecological jewel fringed by idyllic beaches, colourful reefs, sanctuarie­s for rare and endemic wildlife, and unique RAMSAR-listed wetlands. Mauritius and its 1.3 million inhabitant­s depend crucially on its seas for food and for ecotourism, and has fostered a reputation as a conservati­on success story and a worldclass destinatio­n for nature lovers. Ecologists fear if the ship further breaks it could inflict potentiall­y catastroph­ic damage on the island nation’s coastline, which forms the backbone of the economy.

 ??  ?? MAHEBOURG, Mauritius: A man scoops leaked oil from the vessel MV Wakashio that ran aground near Blue Bay Marine Park off the coast of southeast Mauritius on Saturday. — AFP
MAHEBOURG, Mauritius: A man scoops leaked oil from the vessel MV Wakashio that ran aground near Blue Bay Marine Park off the coast of southeast Mauritius on Saturday. — AFP

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