. Earth Science News .
FROTH AND BUBBLE
Riot police, protesters clash in Naples garbage protest

Buenos Aires chokes on garbage as three-day strike ends
Buenos Aires (AFP) Oct 19, 2010 - A brief strike of garbage workers that ended Tuesday has Buenos Aires choking on 20,000 tonnes of uncollected waste, officials and union leaders said here. The strike, which began Sunday, affected 14 million residents of the greater Buenos Aires region. Workers with the union representing the garbage workers were angry that the city and regional governments had failed to build new garbage processing centers, as promised. The strike ended when authorities agreed to keep garbage collector jobs and work harder towards building the processing centers that will use "new technologies," said said Jorge Manzini, the head of the union that organized the strike. Residents of the sprawling Argentine capital generate nearly 5,000 tonnes of garbage a day.
by Staff Writers
Naples, Italy (AFP) Oct 19, 2010
Dozens of protesters clashed with riot police, throwing rocks and bottles and setting two garbage trucks alight in a town near Naples on Tuesday as anger flared over the region's waste crisis.

Police said homemade explosives had been found during an overnight search and officers were seen dragging away local women brandishing Catholic rosary beads, who had been blocking trucks from unloading at the local tip.

"The situation is deteriorating. We're heading for violence," Naples police chief Santi Giuffre said on SkyTG24 television.

"We have deployed 500 men in the last 24 hours," he said, adding that the explosives found were "powerful homemade bombs."

Three policemen were injured and five people were arrested in the violence at Terzigno, some 20 kilometres (12 miles) southeast of Naples.

Tensions have been rising in the Naples region on this flashpoint issue, which helped Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to his election victory in 2008 after he promised to stamp out the waste disposal problem in the area.

"We're making major efforts but if there's going to be a response like this every time then I don't want to deal with this problem any more," said Andrea De Martino, the Italian government's representative in Naples.

Protesters later on Tuesday parked trucks to block a road junction and local officials presented a list of requests including the immediate closure of the Sari tip that has been the focus of public anger, ANSA news agency reported.

Residents say the tip is already full and have said they will put a stop to plans to set up a second tip in the area.

At sit-in protests in recent days in Terzigno protesters prevented trucks from unloading.

The inhabitants of Terzigno and several other municipalities in the area are planning to bring their case to Rome on Friday, where they are to hold a rally.

"We were hoping Berlusconi would come and see us as he promised. He didn't do so so we'll go to him," Gennaro Langella, mayor of Boscoreale, said earlier.

"Local residents... don't want to be condemned to death," he said.

"There are people who no longer sleep at night, people who wake up with their throats burning, people who say they can't breathe any more," he said.

He also condemned the "total silence from the authorities" on the issue.

The issue of waste disposal led to massive protests in 2007 and the business is interlinked with the local organised crime syndicate, the Camorra.

The European Court of Justice earlier this year criticised Italy, saying it did not have an adequate system for waste disposal in the Naples region and warning that the problem was a risk to human health and the environment.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


FROTH AND BUBBLE
Can Hungary's Red Sludge Be Made Less Toxic With Carbon
Bloomington IN (SPX) Oct 18, 2010
The red, metal-laden sludge that escaped a containment pond in Hungary last week could be made less toxic with the help of carbon sequestration, says an Indiana University Bloomington geologist who has a patent pending on the technique. The bauxite residue now covers 40 square kilometers south of the Danube River, and has caused the deaths of eight Hungarians and injured at least 150. The ... read more







FROTH AND BUBBLE
Typhoon destroys rice, corn crops in Philippines

Red Cross appeals for one million dollars for Vietnam floods

Seven million still lack shelter after Pakistan floods: UN

Chile miners return to Camp Hope

FROTH AND BUBBLE
TerraSAR-X And TanDEM-X Flying In Close Formation

TechDemoSat-1 To Demonstrate UK Innovation In Space

Apple net profit up 70 percent, 4.19 million iPads sold

Space Debris' Enviromental Impact

FROTH AND BUBBLE
US oil spill hit a key tuna spawning site: agency

Land Evapotranspiration Taking Unexpected Turn For Worse

Nature And Humans Leaving Mark On Rivers And Streams, Affecting Aquatic Food Webs

Corals Show Ocean Temperature Boundary Rising With Climate Change

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Crew circles North Pole in one summer

Study: Glaciers protected Antarctic range

Himalayan climate change action urged

Disappearing Glaciers Enhanced Biodiversity

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Scientists Prepare For Confined Field Trials Of Drought Tolerant Transgenic Maize

Charcoal Biofilter Cleans Up Fertilizer Waste Gases

UN expert calls for farming changes

States rip apart EU bid to fix GM crops mess

FROTH AND BUBBLE
377 dead in west and central African floods: UN

Bus deaths push Vietnam flood toll to 59: officials

Deadly Typhoon Megi dumps heavy rains on Philippines

Benin floods kill 43, leave nearly 100,000 homeless: UN

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Niger holds three officers for plot against regime

Ethiopia signs peace agreement with rebel faction

HRW calls on DRCongo to arrest former rebel, now general

Niger's number two junta leader arrested: military

FROTH AND BUBBLE
Study predicts women in power, Muslims heading West

Baby born from embryo frozen 19 years

'Missing link' fossil debated by science

Research Suggests Volcanoes Nixed Neanderthals


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement