INDIAN AUTHORITIES BRAND "CLEMENCEAU" ILLEGAL TRANSPORT
Paris, France, 6 January 2006 - Today the Indian Supreme Court Monitoring
Committee (SCMC) branded the French naval aircraft carrier, the Clemenceau,
which is being towed to India for scrapping, as an illegal transport due
to the hazardous materials, including 500 tonnes of asbestos, on board.
Greenpeace demanded that the French Government take back its ship and
for India formally reject its entry into Indian Territory.
The ship left France on December 31, 2005, under a huge cloud of controversy
after Greenpeace and local NGOs attempted to stop the journey through
protest and the French courts. At that time the SCMC said they had no
objection to the ship's scrapping in India, subject to certain conditions,
including an independent audit to confirm that the ship had been decontaminated
by France.
Since the French Government has failed to fulfil these conditions, this
afternoon the Indian authority issued a statement declaring that the Basel
Convention was being violated and that French authorities had not been
honest in regard to the potential hazards on board and that the ship must
not enter India's Economic Exclusion Zone (EEZ) (1).
"The French Government must now accept that the concerns around
the Clemenceau are real and valid. India has spoken - the ship and its
lethal load are not welcome. The Clemenceau is being towed as we speak,
it must stop its journey immediately and be returned to France,"
said Pascal Husting, Executive Director of Greenpeace France. "The
Indian Government must withdraw its permission and publicly reject this
ship's entry into India."
Officials from Technopure, the company contracted by the French Government
to decontaminating the ship before it was dispatched to India, has gone
on public record to confirm that the Clemenceau contains as much as 500
tonnes of asbestos, a huge increase on the 45 to 50 tonnes that the French
Government has admitted to. The company ended its contract with the French
Government and disclosed this information on moral grounds, despite the
confidentiality clause they were bound to.
Technopure officials declared that France never intended to undertake
more than a superficial clean-up of visible toxic substances on board
the Clemenceau and deliberately chose the cheapest option they could get
away with, despite the knowledge that the wastes on board would result
in disease and death for Indian workers and devastation for the Indian
environment.
"The Clemenceau is symbolic of the wider global issue of developed
countries dumping waste they consider too toxic to deal with at home onto
developing countries. Governments must not be allowed to think that their
responsibilities end when these hazardous wastes leave their shores,"
said Ramapati Kumar, Toxics Campaigner, Greenpeace India. "Governments
must be stopped from playing 'Pass the toxic parcel'."
The Clemenceau may be one of the largest ships to be sent for scrap but
every year a vast decrepit armada bearing a dangerous cargo of toxic substances
including asbestos, PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) and heavy metals,
ends up in Asian ship breaking yards (Bangladesh, India, China and Pakistan)
where they are cut up in the crudest of fashions taking a huge toll on
human health and the local environment.
Notes
(1) France is a signatory to the Basel Convention, which prohibits the
transfer of wastes from OECD to non-OECD countries
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