Hungarian crews were working to prevent seepage from a sludge reservoir of an alumina plant in western Hungary yesterday as rescue units searched for missing people in a flooded village.
Hungary declared a state of emergency in three counties on Tuesday, a day after a torrent of toxic red sludge from an alumina plant tore through local villages, killing four people and injuring 120. Three people were reported missing.
“There are three main tasks for us today: One of them is that we should close the burst in the dam by the afternoon, that’s very important,” Gyorgy Bakondi, head of the National Disaster Unit (NDU) told TV2 yesterday morning.
PHOTO: EPA
He said crews were also cleaning off the red sludge — a waste produced during bauxite refining that has a strong caustic effect — from the walls of houses and off streets.
“The third key thing is the protection of waters ... this requires a very intensive intervention,” he said.
The red sludge poured through the village of Kolontar and two other villages in western Hungary on Monday after bursting out of a huge containment reservoir at the Ajkai Timfoldgyar Zrt plant, owned by MAL Zrt.
On Tuesday, the NDU said four more villages were affected.
Many people had suffered from burns and eye irritations caused by lead and other corrosive elements in the mud.
The flood, estimated at about 700,000m3, swept cars off roads and damaged bridges and houses, forcing the evacuation of about 500 residents.
Yesterday disaster crews were expected to open streets of Kolontar, which had been so far closed off by the flood, allowing residents to return for some of their belongings. Bulldozers were clearing away the rubble.
Kolontar resident Erzsebet Veingartner was in her kitchen when the 3.6m-high wave of red slurry hit, sweeping away everything in its path.
“I looked outside and all I saw was the stream swelling like a huge wave,” the 61-year-old widow said on Tuesday as she surveyed her backyard, still under 1.8m of noxious muck.
“I lost all my chickens, my ducks, my Rottweiler, and my potato patch. My late husband’s tools and machinery were in the shed and it’s all gone,” sobbed the woman, who gets by on a US$350 monthly pension. “I have a winter’s worth of firewood in the basement and it’s all useless now.”
“I’m waiting to finally be able to return to my house, but I don’t think I’ll ever move back here,” Balazs Holczer, 35, said. “My wife and my son were trapped inside the house during the spill. She put him on top of a cabinet, and she was seriously burned from the waist down ... they are both in hospital, my son is still in ... shock. He says he doesn’t ever want to come back because he feels safe in the hospital.”
On Tuesday the government suspended production at the plant of MAL Zrt and police were investigating what may have caused the disaster.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has said the spill may have been caused by human error and there was no sign of it being because of natural causes. MAL Zrt said in a statement on Tuesday there had been no sign of the impending disaster, adding that the last inspection of the reservoir on Monday had shown nothing untoward.
Clean-up crews were pouring plaster into a nearby river to help neutralize the spill and strong attempts were being made to prevent the sludge getting into the Danube River.
Hungarian Interior Minister Sandor Pinter said on Tuesday that there was a good chance to prevent the spill reaching the Danube.
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