Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Dirty tricks and toxic waste in Ivory Coast


In the dead of night, the 19th of August 2006, a group of trucks from a newly formed company Abidjan arrived to take waste away. First they illegally dumped their first load at a huge tip in Aquedo.A powerful smell engulfed the area and the tip's operators were called out and the drivers sent packing. They drove around to look for other places to dump their waste, and ending up tipping the toxic waste in 18 different places.The smell made the people gag and sicken.Thousands of people fell ill, says Esaie Modto, "There were women who miscarried, and that was very painful. But still, the worst was that three people, two adults and a girl were killed by the toxic wastes. That was very hard."

Jean Francois Kouadio and his wife, Fidel told BBC NewsNight that Fidel was eight months pregnant with their first child when the fumes swamped their home. She gave birth prematurely and their newly born son dies within a day. Born one year later was their daughter Ama Grace. She fell ill to, the docters said that she was suffering from "was suffering from acute glycaemia caused by the toxic wastes" and they couldn't do anything. Jean Francois and Fidel now fear they will never become parents.

One of the founders of Transfigura, Eric de Turckheim told Jeremy Paxman "these materials were not dangerous for human beings. It was smelly, but not dangerous."Transfigura continues to deny any wrongdoing.
By: Louise

AIR FRACE FLIGHT 447

French army air crewman searches for remains of Air France Flight 447, which had 228 people on board. A seat, an orange buoy, a tank and a fuel slick were spotted about 400 miles off the Brazilian coast.
The Air France jet's wreckage is believed to be 2 miles beneath the Atlantic, perhaps beyond recovery.If there is ever to be an answer to what caused Air France Flight 447 to fall from the sky, the best clues probably lie on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean amid rugged volcanic ridges and steep trenches, some plunging deeper than the Grand Canyon.Search planes scouring the area Tuesday spotted a seat, an orange buoy, a tank and a fuel slick about 400 miles off the Brazilian coast. Brazilian authorities identified them as pieces from the Airbus A330 that disappeared late Sunday, and French officials reiterated that there was virtually no chance that any of the 228 people aboard survived, the flight was flying during a heavy storm and was probably struck by lightning.


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