Texarkana Gazette

Fire distresses Sri Lanka fishermen

Fishing banned near site of 12-day ship blaze, chemical spill

- ERANGA JAYAWARDEN­A Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Krishan Francis and Bharatha Mallawarac­hi of The Associated Press.

KEPUMGODA, Sri Lanka — Sri Lanka’s fishermen are already feeling the impact of an unfolding environmen­tal disaster caused by the slow sinking of a fire-ravaged cargo ship that had been loaded with chemicals.

Fishing remained banned Friday along about 50 miles of coastline, as debris from the Singapore-flagged MV X-Press Pearl — including tons of plastic pellets and burned fiberglass — continued to wash ashore.

Authoritie­s were also on guard for the possible leak of oil and chemicals from the ship, which started sinking off the country’s main port Wednesday, a day after a fire that raged on the vessel for 12 days was extinguish­ed.

A lone fisherman, Kinson Jayalath, was defying the ban Friday on Kepumgoda beach. He said he was trying to catch food for his family but was growing frustrated by the lack of fish in an area where he said there had been plenty just a week ago.

In a nearby village home to many people who depend on the fishing industry, Ajith Nelson said that even before the restrictio­ns were announced, fishermen were having their nets ruined by huge chunks of cottonlike material that got entangled in them. While fishing is still allowed in deeper waters, sales of seafood have plummeted because consumers fear chemical contaminat­ion, said Herman Kumara of the National Fisheries Solidarity Movement.

As the the ship started sinking, crews tried to tow it into deeper waters away from the port but failed after the ship’s stern became submerged and rested on the seabed 70 feet below the surface. The ship was continuing to take on water Friday.

Shumel Yoskovitz, chief executive of ship operator X-Press Feeders, apologized for the disaster Friday in an interview with Channel News Asia.

“I’d like to express my deep regret and apology to the Sri Lankan people for the harm this incident has caused both to the livelihood and environmen­t of Sri Lanka,” Yoskovitz said.

The fire erupted May 20 when the ship was anchored about 9.5 nautical miles northwest of Colombo and waiting to enter the port.

X-Press Feeders disclosed the fire destroyed most of the ship’s cargo, which included 25 tons of nitric acid and other chemicals. It noted salvage experts were remaining with the vessel to monitor its condition and any pollution.

Colombo Port Harbor Master Nirmal Silva said tons of oil in the ship’s fuel tanks may also have burned out with the fire, but authoritie­s were prepared to deal with an oil spill. The navy and coast guard have been preparing for a spill with assistance from India, which has sent three ships including one equipped to deal with marine pollution.

Sri Lankan police are probing the fire and a court in Colombo banned on Tuesday the captain, the engineer and the assistant engineer from leaving the country. The government has said it will take legal action against the owners of the ship to claim compensati­on.

Kumara’s fishing group, along with other activist groups, petitioned Friday the Supreme Court to call on authoritie­s to assess the long-term damage to the environmen­t and marine life, the possible hazardousn­ess of eating fish and the health impacts. The petition called on the owners of the ship, their local agent and the state to pay compensati­on to those affected.

The petitioner­s told the court they obtained the list of the goods carried the ship through a right to informatio­n law and the cargo included nitric acid, caustic soda, sodium methylate, plastic, lubricant oil, quick lime, sodium methodoxid­e, high-density polyethyle­ne, low-density polyethyle­ne, methanol, bright yellow sulphur, urea and cosmetics.

 ?? AP/Eranga Jayawarden­a) ?? Fisherman Kindston Jayalath tries his luck Friday on a beach on the outskirts of Colombo, Sri Lanka, that has been polluted by plastic pellets from a sinking container ship. Jayalath said there are now no fish in the area.
AP/Eranga Jayawarden­a) Fisherman Kindston Jayalath tries his luck Friday on a beach on the outskirts of Colombo, Sri Lanka, that has been polluted by plastic pellets from a sinking container ship. Jayalath said there are now no fish in the area.

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