Jugoslaviske myndigheter dekker over miljøkatastrofen krigen skapte

Øistein Haugsten Holen (o.h.holen@bio.uio.no)
Fri, 02 Jul 1999 11:46:19 +0200

Artikkelen er hentet fra IWPR'S BALKAN CRISIS REPORT, NO. 51
<http://www.iwpr.net/>

IWPR står for 'Institute for War & Peace Reporting', og de har hatt veldig
god dekning av krigen i Kosovo.

IWPR har nettopp vunnet prisen for "Best Overall Journalism Service" på
internett, i konkurranse med BBC og andre større medier. Prisen ble delt ut
ved London City University.
<http://www.jour.city.ac.uk/olja99/present.htm>

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HIDING UNDER THE BLACK RAIN

Ecologists say the authorities in Serbia are concealing the extent of the
ecological and health threats caused by NATO bombing.

By Milenko Vasovic

When Novi Sad youngster D. Benasic went out on the streets last month to
play football with his friends he was wearing white trainers. But when he
returned home his shoes were literally black as soot.

Fortunately for the boy, his parents' frustration was reserved for NATO,
not him. Their streets have been drenched with slimy, sooty rainwater, the
result of the West's attack on Novi Sad's oil industry on May 1. Thirty oil
tanks were set ablaze and continued burning until May 11, sending foul
smoke into the air all the while. Rains swept the sticky grime through the
city thoroughfares, onto the boy's shoes--and into the Danube River.

There has been no official explanation for the pollution, though one is
hardly needed. A massive environmental disaster is on hand, with untold
health problems to come. Even the vast quantities of fire-extinguishing
foam needed to douse the eleven-day blaze pose their own ecological threat.

Pancevo, a city of 150,000 citizens near Belgrade, suffered a similar fate.
Three major industrial plants were destroyed by NATO bombs and
missiles--the city refinery, the Petrohemija oil products processing plant
and the Azotara nitrogen-processing plant.

The strike on this last target will leave a particularly terrible legacy.
In the early hours after the strike on the Azotara plant on April 18,
levels of the carcinogen vinyl-chloride monomer (VHM) were found to be a
lethal 10,600 times over recognised safety levels. Rains north of the city
have washed down the escaped VHM, poisoning the land and the crops, grains
and fruit growing on it.

This information was initially concealed from the community and the rest of
the world. A Canadian TV news crew was barred from the area, and Belgrade
officialdom has held silent on the potential risks.

"It is obvious that the authorities are hiding the truth," says Dusan
Vasiljevic, chairman of the Belgrade Democratic Party's ecology committee,
"even though we could benefit from knowing the risks for the Yugoslav
population.

"They are doing that for fear of those who are affected, and for fear of
facing pressure to do something. On the other hand, they themselves are
aware that they are not competent, nor can they do anything," Vasiljevic
adds.

But pollution of this kind and on this scale is unprecedented. Experts are
offering help in exchange for this knowledge, and a Swiss firm has offered
equipment.

Simon Bancov, Serbia's environmental inspector, believes that the air
pollution over Pancevo is now within safe limits, even though water and
land is still affected. But even he is having trouble getting accurate data.

"Officials say that everything is all right," he says, "but there are
various forms of pressure exerted on researchers not to publish the
information. Those who do disclose sensitive data will probably be held to
account [by the state]."

Like everyone else he must make do with clues. "The ban on fishing best
indicates that the water is polluted," Bancov adds.

Huge quantities of ammonium and ammonium based substances have been leaked
into the Danube--a river that was already suffering from pollution from the
plants even before the first bombs fell.

The Serbian Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Water Economy says local
fish are a health hazard and has barred fishing on the Danube downstream
from Pancevo, and on the Kolubara, Beljanica and Turija rivers.

Even more potentially deadly mudflows, bearing heavy metals and mercury,
are seeping into their waters. As the river headwaters rise, they will
sweep the poison across Yugoslavia and through southern Europe.

The lack of information is worrying everyone. The fate of this year's wheat
crop was briefly discussed when the plants were first hit, but since then
there has been little official word beyond the statement that the situation
is "being monitored".

Some officials like Bancov are breaking ranks to warn against eating fish,
eggs and meat from the affected regions, and some experts advise people to
boil water before drinking. Fears of future birth defects are tormenting
pregnant women, culminating in public calls for help with abortions, though
the Serbian Ministry of Information says that unborn foetuses are not at
risk.

But teams from the United Nations Environmental Programme and the United
Nations Centre for Human Settlements in Yugoslavia have already sent a
report to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan warning of the dangers of
"miscarriages, birth defects as well as incurable diseases of the nervous
system and liver."

Elsewhere the bombing of electrical installations in Kostolac, Lzarevac,
Nis, Belgrade and Smederevo destroyed a large number of high-voltage
transformers. Some used the highly toxic and cancerous coolant piralen, one
litre of which can poison four million litres of water.

The German section of the World Wide Fund for Nature has called for the
adoption of an international action plan to tackle the crisis. It warns
that "due to the consequences of the destruction of the chemical plants the
countries in the lower reaches of the Danube and the Black Sea region are
particularly affected."

Filip Veler, head of its Danube-Karpati programme, has appealed for urgent
action. He says people must not be deceived by the fact that some types of
pollution cannot be seen by a naked eye. Mercury and heavy metal pollution
requires particular attention, and can travel well beyond the Yugoslav
borders.

Farmers around the Bulgarian towns of Kula and Belogradcik reported that
flowers fell from fruit trees and vegetables began to rot on their land
after the blasting of the fertiliser plant over the border in Prahovo.

Even some ordinary mosquitoes may be carrying poison, with reports of bites
swelling up unusually, while paediatricians around target areas near
Belgrade are reporting numerous new and unexplained allergies among
youngsters.

Last but not least there is the threat from the bombs and missiles tipped
with depleted uranium, some 150 of which are thought to have been dropped
on Belgrade alone. Belgrade University chemist Predrag Polic warns that the
danger from radioactive dust thrown up by the bombs may be even greater in
Kosovo. There, an estimated 150 such weapons were landing daily during the
conflict.

Physicists warn that radioactive dust can spread up to 10 kilometres from
the blast site. Belgrade nuclear physicist Vladimir Ajdacic urges
widespread measurements of radioactivity in the affected areas and the
public release of the data. But there are little resources and even less
available expertise for such a task.

Milenko Vasovic is a journalist based in Belgrade.

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