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Greenpeace Protests Asbestos Danger Of French Ship To Be Sent To India

Greenpeace activists display banners demonstrating, 12 December 2005, against the departure of former French aircraft carrier Clemenceau at the Port of Toulon, south of France. The decommissioned vessel is bound for India where it will be finally dismantled in spite of containing huge quantities of highly toxic asbestos. The banners read 'ASBESTOS CARRIER _ STAY OUT OF INDIA'. AFP photo by Greenpeace/Pierre Gleizes.

Toulon, France (AFP) Dec 12, 2005
Two Greenpeace activists who boarded a decommissioned French aircraft carrier Monday to protest plans to send the asbestos-riddled ship to India for scrapping are spending the night on it, their organisation said.

Three protesters jumped from small boats to the hull of the 44-year-old Clemenceau, kept in the Mediterranean port of Toulon after being mothballed in 1997, and climbed on to the radar platform at the top of the boat's superstructure.

One later left but the other two, one of them Indian, "are getting ready to spend the night," Greenpeace said.

The protestor who left the carrier was arrested, to join four others who had climbed up a crane in the dockyard, where they unfurled a banner reading: "Asbestos carrier: not here, nor elsewhere".

Greenpeace said it organised the stunt to call attention to the carcinogenic danger posed by the vessel and to call on the French government to remove the asbestos itself instead of sending the carrier to India.

"It is clear that the government is unable today to manage the decommissioning of its military and merchant ships. We ask that the government start a national strategy of dismantling them that observes international law, human rights and the environment," said the head of Greenpeace France, Pascal Husting.

The French government intends to send the Clemenceau to India to be broken down into 22,000 tonnes of scrap metal.

Although some of the asebestos insulation has been removed, Greenpeace and an anti-asbestos group, the Jussieu Committee, say the bulk of the 210 tonnes of the dangerous fireproofing remains.

"Decontamination is very expensive and so the easiest thing to do is to send it to other countries where labour laws can be easily flouted," said activist Madhumita Dutta of pressure group Corporate Accountability Desk.

Dutta said in a statement released in New Dehli that India did not have the proper technology, equipment or procedures in place to handle the decontamination of the Clemenceau.

"The workers use the most unsophisticated methods to break the ship down. Even one fibre of asbestos can cause serious medical problems," she said.

To highlight the human and environmental costs of shipbreaking, Greenpeace has also published a report titled "End of Life Ships", which highlights poor working conditions at shipbreaking yards all over the world.

Almost half of the world's ships end up in India -- which has the world's biggest shipbreaking yard -- for dismantling after their sailing lives are over, according to Greenpeace.

India was selected as its destination for the process after a Spanish company which won the original decommissioning tender in 2003 tried to send the ship to Turkey to have its asbestos stripped out, in contravention of EU law.

That contract was rescinded and the French defence ministry decided to do some of the decontamination work itself before sending the ship to India.

The Clemenceau, which took part in the 1991 Gulf War, was taken out of service when it was superseded by France's new, nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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