A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, June 2, 2019
Philippines ships dumped trash back to Canada
@AsCorrespondent-31st May 2019
TONNES of garbage sent to the Philippines years ago was shipped back to
Canada on Friday after a festering diplomatic row, as Asian nations
increasingly reject serving as dumping grounds for international trash.
After a long campaign to urge Canada to take back the rotting waste,
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte lashed out at Ottawa last week and
ordered the refuse returned immediately.
The 69 shipping containers of garbage were loaded onto a cargo vessel at
Subic Bay, a former US naval base and shipping port northwest of
Manila, and began the lengthy trip to Canada.
“Baaaaaaaaa bye, as we say it,” Philippine Foreign Secretary Teodoro
Locsin wrote on Twitter, along with images of the vessel leaving.
Canada’s Environment Minister Catherine McKenna welcomed the news of the
trash being returned, telling reporters on Thursday: “We committed with
the Philippines and we’re working closely with them.”
Just days earlier Malaysia announced it was shipping 450 tonnes of
imported plastic waste back to its sources, including Australia,
Bangladesh, Canada, China, Japan, Saudi Arabia and the United States.
For years China had received the bulk of scrap plastic from around the
world, but closed its doors to foreign refuse last year in an effort to
clean up its environment.
Huge quantities of waste plastic have since been redirected to Southeast
Asia, including Malaysia, Indonesia and to a lesser degree the
Philippines.
“We’ve seen pristine communities… transformed into dumpsites because of a
tsunami of waste shipments from the US, UK and Australia as a result of
the China ban,” said Von Hernandez, global coordinator from Break Free
From Plastic advocacy group.
300 million tonnes of waste
The Philippine row centres on dozens of containers which a Canadian firm
sent to the Southeast Asian nation in 2013 and 2014 — incorrectly
labelled as recyclables.
The issue has polluted Manila-Ottawa ties for years, but it blew up when
Duterte said in an April speech: “Let’s fight Canada. I will declare
war against them.”
Since then Canada pledged to take back the waste, but after it missed a
Manila-imposed May 15 deadline the Philippines recalled its envoys to
Ottawa.
Duterte’s spokesman, Salvador Panelo, ratcheted up the pressure by
saying Manila would ship the trash back on its own “immediately” and
threatened to dump the waste in Canadian waters.
From the Philippine side there were immediate signs the departure of the trash would stabilise Manila-Ottawa relations.
“To our recalled posts, get your flights back. Thanks and sorry for the
trouble you went through to drive home a point.” Foreign Secretary
Locsin tweeted on Friday.
Global concern over plastic pollution has been spurred by shocking
images of waste-clogged rivers in Southeast Asia and accounts of dead
sea creatures found with kilos of refuse in their stomachs.
Around 300 million tonnes of plastic are produced every year, according
to the Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF), with much of it ending up in
landfills or polluting the seas, in what has become a growing
international crisis.
Ron LOPEZ © Agence France-Presse