Vietnamese police have launched an investigation into the illegal dumping of harmful waste material from a Formosa Plastics Group steel plant already under fire for massive fish deaths in what officials say was the country’s worst environmental disaster.
Bui Dinh Quang, deputy police chief in Ha Tinh Province, where the Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corp plant is located, said a local company was the target of the investigation after police last month caught the company burying the industrial waste at a private farm.
About 354 tonnes of the waste was buried in two places, including on the private farm in Ha Tinh Province, Quang said. He said tests by the Vietnamese Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment confirmed the waste contained harmful levels of cyanide.
Photo: AP
Quang said Formosa Ha Tinh Steel Corp and its executives will also be investigated for signing a contract with the company, which was not authorized to handle harmful industrial waste.
The steel company last month acknowledged that it was responsible for the pollution that killed large numbers of fish off the central Vietnamese coast, and pledged to pay US$500 million to clean it up and compensate affected people.
The government in a report to the Vietnamese National Assembly last month said the disaster harmed the livelihoods of more than 200,000 people, including 41,000 fishermen in four central provinces.
An estimated 104 tonnes of fish washed ashore along more than 200km of Vietnam’s central coast in April, the report said.
The pollution sparked rare protests across the country.
The US$10.6 billion steel complex is one of the largest foreign investments in Vietnam.
Toxins including cyanide and carbolic acids were released into the sea during a test run of the plant.
Palauan President Surangel Whipps Jr arrived in Taiwan last night to kick off his first visit to the country since beginning his second term earlier this year. After arriving at Taoyuan International Airport at around 6:30 pm, Whipps and his delegation were welcomed by Minister of Foreign Affairs Lin Chia-lung (林佳龍). Speaking to gathered media, the Palauan leader said he was excited and honored to be back in Taiwan on his first state visit to Taiwan since he was sworn in this January. Among those traveling with Whipps is Minister of State Gustav N. Aitaro, Public Infrastructure
President William Lai (賴清德) yesterday thanked Palau for its continued support of Taiwan's international participation, as Taipei was once again excluded from the World Health Assembly (WHA) currently taking place in Switzerland. "Palau has never stopped voicing support for Taiwan" in the UN General Assembly, the WHO and other UN-affiliated agencies, Lai said during a bilateral meeting with visiting Palau President Surangel Whipps Jr. "We have been profoundly touched by these endorsements," Lai said, praising the Pacific island nation's firm support as "courageous." Lai's remarks came as Taiwan was excluded for the ninth consecutive year from the WHA, which is being held in
RESOLUTIONS DEBATE: Taiwan’s allies said that UN and WHA resolutions cited by China and other nations ‘do not determine Taiwan’s participation in WHO activities’ A proposal to invite Taiwan to this year’s World Health Assembly (WHA) was rejected on Monday, resulting in Taipei’s absence from the annual meeting for a ninth consecutive year, although partners spoke up for Taiwan’s participation at the first day of the meeting. The first agenda item after the opening was a “two-on-two debate” on a proposal to invite Taiwan to participate at the WHA as an observer. Similar to previous years, two countries made statements in favor of the proposal, while two others expressed their opposition. Philippine Secretary of Health Teodoro Herbosa, president of the 78th WHA, accepted the WHA General Committee’s
At least three people died and more than a dozen were injured yesterday afternoon when a vehicle struck a group of pedestrians in New Taipei City’s Sansia District (三峽). The incident happened at about 4pm when a car rammed into pedestrians at an intersection near Bei Da Elementary School. Witnesses said the sedan, being driven at a high speed, ran a red light, knocking scooters out of the way and hitting students crossing the road before careening into a median near the intersection of Guocheng and Guoguang streets. The incident resulted in three deaths and 13 injuries, including the driver, a 78-year-old man