用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Mauritius racing to contain oil spill as leader wants compensation for heavy environmental damage
2020-08-13 00:00:00.0     福克斯新闻-世界     原网页

       close

       Video

       Fox News Flash top headlines for August 13 Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com.

       Mauritius, an island nation in the Indian Ocean, wants the owner of a stricken Japanese ship that has spilled 1,000 tons of oil into the sea to pay up.

       The declaration from Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth comes as efforts were underway Thursday to drain the 500 remaining tons of oil onboard the MV Wakashio, which ran aground on July 25 and is increasingly in danger of splitting in two.

       “It's essential that the ship is emptied before it breaks up,” Jean Hugue Gardenne of the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation told the Associated Press. “Quite a lot of oil has been pumped out in the past few days, but we cannot let up. There is so much damage already.”

       This photo provided by the French Army shows oil leaking Tuesday from the MV Wakashio, a bulk carrier ship that ran aground off the southeast coast of Mauritius (EMAE/AP)

       MAURITIUS OIL DISASTER: RACE TO DRAIN STRICKEN SHIP BEFORE IT SPLITS IN HALF

       An estimated 2,500 tons of fuel already has been removed from the ship, stranded on a coral reef at Pointe d’Esny, a sanctuary for rare wildlife. But the oil it has spilled has fouled the country’s coastline and the protected wetlands area, with Jugnauth declaring a national disaster.

       Jugnauth says Mauritius will seek compensation from Nagashiki Shipping – the vessel’s owner – but the monetary value is unclear.

       Jugnauth’s government is also under pressure to explain why it did not take immediate action to empty the ship when it ran aground. Two weeks later, after pounding by waves, the ship cracked and began leaking.

       Environmentalists on Monday warned it could break apart “at any time.”

       Volunteers take part in the clean up operation in Mahebourg, Mauritius, on Wednesday. (AP)

       MAURITIUS DECLARES EMERGENCY OVER OIL SPILL

       As a result of the spill, some of the turquoise waters surrounding Mauritius – an island nation off the coast of Africa -- were stained a muddy black, drenching waterbirds and reptiles with sticky oil.

       Thousands of Mauritians have been working for days to reduce the damage by making improvised barriers from fabric and stuffed with straw and sugar cane leaves to try to contain the oil's spread. Others have scooped up oil from the shallow waters. It is estimated that nearly 400 out of the 1,000 tons that spilled have been removed from the sea.

       France sent a naval ship, military aircraft and technical advisers from the nearby island of Reunion after Mauritius appealed for help last week. Japanese experts have arrived on the island and are assisting the effort. The United Nations is sending experts.

       Thousands of students, environmental activists and residents of Mauritius are working around the clock trying to reduce the damage to the Indian Ocean island from the oil spill. (EMAE/AP)

       CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

       The Wildlife Foundation is alarmed that the oil spill will ruin the work that it has done since 1985 to improve the area where the ship ran aground, Gardenne said.

       “We have planted about 200,000 indigenous trees to restore the coastal forest," he told the Associated Press. "We re-introduced endangered birds, including the pink pigeon, the olive white-eye and the critically endangered Mauritius fody to the Isle aux Aigrettes. Now all this is threatened as the oil is seeping into the soil and the coral reefs.”

       The Associated Press contributed to this report.

       


标签:综合
关键词: spill     Wildlife     island     Fox News     theMV Wakashio     1,000 tons     Mauritius     spilled    
滚动新闻