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Debris of war compounds ecological nightmare in Lebanon

Source: The Daily Star
 
 Anne Chaon

Agence France Presse

OUZAI: One month of Israeli bombardment during the war in Lebanon this summer created millions of ton of rubble, adding to the ecological nightmare of a country that has suffered a succession of conflicts. Even in normal times the main north-south coastal road was a handy dumping ground for rubbish, but now a dump of spectacular proportions is rising at Ouzai on the southern exit from Beirut.

Between the highway and the shoreline an ever-growing mountain of acrid-smelling debris is piling steadily higher - and also marching inexorably toward the breaking waves.

These are the ruins of the capital's southern suburbs, which were repeatedly pounded by Israel in July and August.

From this one area alone, in which 400 buildings were pulverized, engineers estimate the volume of debris at 1.2 million cubic meters. Every day some 400 trucks laden with rubble make the trip between the suburbs and the rubbish tip.

"For two days at the end of August everything was tipped directly into the sea," says Omar al-Naeem of Greenpeace Lebanon. "But organizations protested, and now it is all collected and deposited along the shore."

Clearing the suburbs is expected to take at least until the end of the year.

At least this rubble mountain can be seen, and the authorities know where it is.

In South Lebanon, where the fighting was fierce and the authorities say 10,649 homes were completely destroyed, you have to search for much of the debris, which has often been dumped in the folds between hills.

Only by following garbage trucks does one come across these "secret" dumps - along secondary roads, well-hidden at the bottom of valleys and along water courses or down banks by the roadside.

Ten or 11 trucks hauling 13 tons each day continue to clear the village of Ganduriyeh, which was home to 6,000 people, according to the driver of one truck found emptying debris.

"The rubble of destroyed houses isn't just cement," says Ricardo Khoury, whose environmental consulting agency, Elard, is contributing to a United Nations Environment Program assessment of the ecological damage caused by the war.
 
You also find everything that makes a home, things like batteries, storage heaters, fridges, electronic equipment ... millions and millions of dollars are needed to dispose of all this properly," he says.

"It's not easy," he adds. "Neither is it a priority."

Elard has pinpointed 16 sites that Khoury says are high priority and need to be cleaned up quickly. These include the generating station at Jiyyeh south of Beirut, where aerial bombardment created a massive oil slick that coated the Lebanese shoreline with sludge; fuel-storage tanks at Beirut's airport; warehouses that storied food, detergents and chemical products in Choueifat, also south of the capital; plastics factories in Tyre; and a glass-producing plant in the Bekaa Valley.

All of these sites were hit by Israeli bombs or missiles and all burned for days.

But the treatment of refuse - wastewater included - is practically unheard of in Lebanon.

Apart from Beirut and Zahle in the east of the country, the main coastal towns - Tyre and Sidon in the South and Tripoli in the North - discharge their waste directly into the sea, says Karim Jisr, environmental consultant to the World Bank and the United Nations Development Program.

"Neither the government nor local authorities can be expected to provide a long-term solution. They come under a lot of social pressure, hence these improvised dumping sites," Jisr says.

"The idea would be to find a secure location [for the debris], and then there would be enough time to sort the problem out."

He says Lebanon's Council for Development and Reconstruction is looking into the possibility of using some the country's quarries, most of which are no longer in use.

"They could be filled in and then covered with inert material," Jisr says.

"However the real problem is the coastline, which is mostly not government land, but is owned by churches or private individuals. It will become no longer possible to cover kilometers of coast with debris" from the war. - AFP


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