Anxious Mauritians use hair to stem Japanese ship's oil spill
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[August 10, 2020]
By Katharine Houreld
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Mauritians are making
floating booms of human hair and leaves in a round-the-clock scramble to
mop up oil leaking from a grounded Japanese ship onto their pristine
Indian Ocean beaches.
The MV Wakashio, owned by the Nagashiki Shipping Company and operated by
Mitsui OSK Line, began oozing fuel into turquoise sea waters last week
after hitting a reef off the island.
Mauritius has declared a state of emergency and former colonial ruler
France has sent aid in what environmental group Greenpeace said could be
a major ecological crisis.
Romina Tello, 30-year-old founder of eco-tourism agency Mauritius
Conscious, spent the weekend helping clean black sludge from mangrove
swamps. She said Mauritians were making booms to float on the sea out of
sugar cane leaves, plastic bottles and hair that people were voluntarily
cutting off.
"Hair absorbs oil but not water," Tello explained by phone. "There's
been a big campaign around the island to get the hair."
Videos online show volunteers sewing leaves and hair into nets to float
on the surface and corral the oil until it can be sucked up by hoses.
Diving centres, fishermen and others have all joined in the cleanup
effort, with some providing sandwiches, guesthouses offering free
accommodation to volunteers and hair salons offering discounts to those
donating hair, Tello said.
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A still image taken from a video shows a cleanup crew working at the
site of an oil spill after the bulk carrier ship MV Wakashio ran
aground on a reef, at Riviere des Creoles, Mauritius, August 8,
2020. REUBEN PILLAY/REUBSVISION.MU,
The oil spill is near the Blue Bay Marine Park, known for its
spectacular corals and myriad fish species.
"It is really moving – everyone is doing what we can. It breaks our
hearts to see the damage," Tello said.
Mauritius relies on tourism as a major contributor to its economy,
63 billion rupees ($1.6 billion) last year.
"We apologise profusely and deeply for the great trouble we have
caused," Akihiko Ono, executive vice president of Mitsui OSK Lines,
told reporters in Tokyo on Sunday, pledging to do everything
possible to stem the spill.
At least 1,000 tonnes of oil is estimated to have leaked, with 500
tonnes salvaged and some 2,500 tonnes remaining.
(Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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