UNEP has determined that the dumping, which killed at
least 12 people and led well over 100,000 others to seek medical care, is
clearly a crime. The crisis began when a ship unloaded 500 tonnes of
petrochemical waste into trucks which then dumped it in at least 15 sites around
Abidjan. The waste contained a mixture of petroleum distillates, hydrogen
sulphide, mercaptans, phenolic compounds and sodium hydroxide.
Under the BasselConvention, which UNEP
administers, any nation exporting hazardous waste must obtain prior written
permission from the importing country, as well as a permit detailing the
contents and destination of the waste.
“We must assist Côte d’Ivoire now, but it
cannot end there. We must enforce existing laws in both OECD and developing
countries alongside building the capacity for customs authorities and local
waste management at ports and elsewhere to minimize the chances of such an
incident occurring in the future,” Mr. Steiner said referring to the
Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) that groups 30
industrialized nations.
“One practical step forward that the
international community must consider urgently is the ratification and thus
bringing into force of the Liability and Compensation Protocol of the Basel
Convention,” he added. At present, as an interim measure, the Convention has an
emergency fund. But so far, the fund has just $270,000.