Connect with us

World

Brazil sinks aircraft carrier in Atlantic despite pollution risk

Published

on

Brazil sinks aircraft carrier in Atlantic despite pollution risk

Critics of Brazil’s deliberate sinking of the decommissioned Sao Paulo plane service described it as a ‘state-sponsored environmental crime’.

Brazil has sunk a decommissioned plane service within the Atlantic Ocean regardless of considerations expressed by environmental teams that the ageing warship was filled with poisonous supplies.

The “deliberate and managed sinking occurred late within the afternoon” on Friday, some 350 km (220 miles) off the Brazilian coast within the Atlantic Ocean, in an space with an “approximate depth of 5,000 meters [16,000 feet]”, Brazil’s Navy stated in an announcement.

The choice to scuttle the six-decade-old plane service “Sao Paulo” got here after Brazilian authorities had tried in useless to discover a port prepared to welcome the vessel.

Although defence officers stated they’d sink the vessel within the “most secure space”, environmentalists attacked the choice, saying the warship contained tonnes of asbestos, heavy metals and different poisonous supplies that might leach into the water and pollute the marine meals chain.

Advertisement

The Basel Motion Community had referred to as on newly-elected Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva -who took workplace final month pledging to reverse surging environmental destruction below far-right ex-President Jair Bolsonaro – to right away halt the “harmful” plan to scuttle the ship.

The NGO Shipbreaking Platform – a coalition of environmental, labour and human rights organisations – had described Brazil’s deliberate sinking of the Sao Paulo as doubtlessly a “state-sponsored environmental crime”.

Constructed within the late Fifties in France, whose navy sailed the plane service for 37 years because the Foch, the warship had earned a spot in Twentieth-century naval historical past. The Sao Paulo took half in France’s first nuclear exams within the Pacific within the Sixties and noticed deployments in Africa, the Center East and the previous Yugoslavia from the Seventies to Nineties.

Brazil purchased the 266-metre (873ft) plane service for $12 million in 2000. A hearth that broke out on board the ship in 2005 accelerated the vessel’s decline.

Advertisement

Final yr, Brazil authorised Turkish agency Sok Denizcilik to dismantle the Sao Paulo for scrap steel. However in August, simply as a tugboat was about to tow it into the Mediterranean Sea, Turkish environmental authorities blocked the plan.

Brazil’s defence ministry stated in an announcement on Wednesday that the dismantling plan for the ship “represented an unprecedented try” by Brazil to securely eliminate the ship by way of “environmentally sound recycling”.

Brazil then introduced the plane service again house however didn’t enable it into port, citing the “excessive danger” to the setting.

In line with the defence ministry assertion, the world chosen for the sinking was recognized by the Navy’s Hydrography Centre, which thought of it the “most secure” location because it was outdoors Brazil’s unique financial zone, environmental safety areas, free from documented submarine cable and was at a depth larger than 3,000 metres (9,840ft).

“In view of the details introduced and the growing danger concerned in towing, as a result of deterioration of the hull’s buoyancy situations and the inevitability of spontaneous/uncontrolled sinking, it’s not potential to undertake some other plan of action aside from jettisoning the hull, by way of of the deliberate and managed sinking,” the ministry stated.

Advertisement

World

COP29 Host Urges Collaboration as Deal Negotiations Enter Final Stage

Published

on

COP29 Host Urges Collaboration as Deal Negotiations Enter Final Stage
By Valerie Volcovici and Nailia Bagirova BAKU (Reuters) – COP29 climate summit host Azerbaijan urged participating countries to bridge their differences and come up with a finance deal on Friday, as negotiations at the two-week conference entered their final hours. World governments represented at …
Continue Reading

World

Man in India regains consciousness before his cremation on funeral pyre: reports

Published

on

Man in India regains consciousness before his cremation on funeral pyre: reports

A 25-year-old man who was declared dead and about to be cremated in India this week was found to be still alive by witnesses, according to reports. 

Rohitash Kumar, 25, who was deaf and mute, was declared dead at a hospital in the state of Rajasthan in the northwestern part of India without a post-mortem examination, according to The Times of India. 

Once it was clear Kumar was alive at his cremation on Thursday afternoon, his family reportedly took him back to a hospital where he died early Friday morning. 

COLORADO FUNERAL HOME OWNERS PLEAD GUILTY TO CORPSE ABUSE AFTER NEARLY 200 BODIES FOUND DECOMPOSING

A crematorium in India.  (Rupak De Chowdhuri/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Advertisement

Three doctors involved in declaring Kumar dead at the Bhagwan Das Khetan district hospital have since been suspended, the newspaper reported. 

Kumar had suffered an epileptic seizure and was declared dead after he flatlined while doctors were performing CPR on him, the Daily Mail reported, citing the AFP news service. 

Relatives carry the body of a person who died of COVID-19 as multiple pyres of other victims burn at a crematorium in New Delhi, India, in 2021.

Relatives carry the body of a person who died of COVID-19 as multiple pyres of other victims burn at a crematorium in New Delhi, India, in 2021. (AP Photo/Amit Sharma, File)

10 NEWBORN BABIES DIE IN INDIA AFTER FIRE RIPS THROUGH HOSPITAL NEONATAL UNIT

“The situation was nothing short of a miracle,” a witness at the funeral pyre told local news outlet ETV Bharat. “We all were in shock. He was declared dead, but there he was, breathing and alive.” 

Ramavtar Meena, a government official in Rajasthan’s Jhunjhunu district, called the incident “serious negligence.”

Advertisement
Rajasthan, India

The state of Rajasthan in northwestern India.  (Vishal Bhatnagar/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

“Action will be taken against those responsible. The working style of the doctors will also be thoroughly investigated,” he said. 

Meena added that a committee had been formed to investigate the incident. 

Continue Reading

World

Thousands march across Europe protesting violence against women

Published

on

Thousands march across Europe protesting violence against women

Violence against women and girls remains largely unreported due to the impunity, silence, stigma and shame surrounding it.

ADVERTISEMENT

Thousands marched across France and Italy protesting violence against women on Saturday – two days before the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. 

Those demonstrating protested all forms of violence against women – whether it be sexual, physical, psychological and economic. 

The United Nations designated 25 November as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The goal is to raise awareness of the violence women are subjected to and the reality that the scale and nature of the issue is often hidden. 

Activists demonstrated partially naked in Rome, hooded in balaclavas to replicate the gesture of Iranian student Ahoo Daryaei, who stripped in front of a university in Tehran to protest the country’s regime. 

In France, demonstrations were planned in dozens of cities like Paris, Marseille and Lille. 

Advertisement

More than 400 organisations reportedly called for demonstrations across the country amidst widespread shock caused by the Pelicot mass rape trial. 

Violence against women and girls remains one of the most prevalent and pervasive human rights violations in the world, according to the United Nations. Globally, almost one in three women have been subjected to physical and/or sexual violence at least once in their life. 

For at least 51,100 women in 2023, the cycle of gender-based violence ended with their murder by partners or family members. That means a woman was killed every ten minutes. 

Continue Reading

Trending