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Armenian Police Investigate Damage To Toxic Waste Site

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  • Armenian Police Investigate Damage To Toxic Waste Site

    ARMENIAN POLICE INVESTIGATE DAMAGE TO TOXIC WASTE SITE
    Hasmik Smbatian

    http://www.armenialiberty.org/content/ar ticle/2044899.html
    17.05.2010

    Armenia -- Journalist EdiK Baghdasaryan investigates the chemical
    waste disposal site in Nubarashen, Yerevan, undated

    The Armenian police said on Monday that they have formally launched
    criminal proceedings into the mysterious digging up of an industrial
    grave near Yerevan that dangerously exposed large amounts of toxic
    waste.

    The Soviet-era burial site located near the city's southern Nubarashen
    suburb contains more than 500 metric tons of DDT and other poisonous
    substances that had been used by Armenian chemical enterprises.

    An Armenian journalist and several environmentalists discovered
    late last month that unknown individuals had broken into the site,
    tearing down its fencing and flattening a mound of land covering the
    waste with bulldozers or other heavy machinery.

    Responding to their dire warnings, the Armenian government has
    scrambled to restore the site with 31.6 million drams ($82,000) in
    emergency funding approved on May 7. The government has been widely
    criticized for its slow response to what ecologists regards as a
    potential environment disaster.

    A national police spokesman told RFE/RL's Armenian service that a
    criminal case has been opened under two articles of the Criminal Code
    dealing with substantial damage to property and violations of safety
    standards that put many lives at risk. Nobody has been questioned or
    detained as part of the inquiry yet, he said.

    Meanwhile, senior officials from the Armenian ministries of environment
    protection and emergencies assured journalists that relevant
    authorities have already put warning signs around the burial site
    and are now busy covering it with new thick layers of soil and clay,
    restoring its water drainage system and circling it with barbed wire.

    They said the urgent measures are only the first phase of a waste
    disposal program envisaged by the government. They said its ultimate
    objective is the destruction of the dangerous chemicals.

    "We have no destruction facilities in Armenia," said Hovannes Yemishian
    of the Emergencies Ministry. "Transporting it to another country is
    also problematic." The transportation process alone could cost $2.5
    million, he told a news conference.

    "We could appeal to the Russian Federation which has many such
    facilities and can destroy such substances very well, and it would
    cost us less," said Anahit Aleksandrian, the head of an Environment
    Ministry department dealing with toxic waste disposal. "Our main
    problem is transportation," she added, alluding to the fact that
    Armenia has no common border with Russia.

    Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian likewise said on May 7 that the
    destruction process will be costly and require funding from Armenia's
    foreign donors.
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