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BEIRUT: Polluted River Poses Health Threat To Bourj Hammoud

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  • BEIRUT: Polluted River Poses Health Threat To Bourj Hammoud

    POLLUTED RIVER POSES HEALTH THREAT TO BOURJ HAMMOUD
    By Andrew Wander

    Daily Star
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_i d=1&categ_id=1&article_id=95712
    Sept 5 2008
    Lebanon

    Local officials say government not helping

    BEIRUT: A polluted river running through a crowded suburb of Beirut
    could pose a serious risk to the health of people living nearby, but
    the government is doing nothing to combat the issue, local leaders
    said Thursday. The Beirut River runs through Beirut's mostly Armenian
    district of Bourj Hammoud, and dries up to little more than a trickle
    during summer, exposing piles of rotting garbage and sewage washed
    down during the winter months.

    The dried river bed is full of raw sewage, as well as plastic bottles
    and rotting vegetables, residents say. It also attracts vermin
    and reptiles, and produces a deeply unpleasant smell as the refuse
    decomposes under the hot summer sun.

    Officials at the Bourj Hammoud municipality say they are not receiving
    the help they need from the government to solve the issue. Raffi
    Kokoghlanian, the deputy mayor of Bourj Hammoud said: "There is a
    major crisis at the river. Most villages from the source to the shore
    discharge sewage into the river, and this is creating major health
    problems for the residents. But the responsibility to clean the river
    does not lie with the municipality. It belongs to the government and
    they don't have the resources or possibly the inclination to clean
    the area. It is actually illegal for another party to clean the river."

    Contact with polluted water contaminated by raw sewage can lead to
    a range of health problems, including leptospirosis, a bacterial
    infection that causes jaundice and even death if left untreated. The
    disease is particularly associated with vermin-infested waterways. In
    addition, contact with water contaminated with human waste can also
    lead to typhoid, which usually becomes more common in Lebanon at the
    end of the summer.

    Because the river flows into the sea, it also contributes to Lebanon's
    ongoing problem with coastal pollution, which poses a risk to swimmers
    and wildlife. Scientific studies have shown that contact with polluted
    sea water can lead to several health problems, including skin diseases
    and diarrhea.

    Ribal Mansour, a 25-year-old student, says that something should
    be done about the levels of pollution in the river. "It smells
    very bad. The water goes out into the sea, taking with it millions
    of bacteria. It's a risk to health. In the summer it is worse than
    the winter. I think it happens because all the factories drain their
    pollution into the river. You see rats and water snakes in there. They
    should close the factories, and someone should clean up the mess."

    Kokoghlanian agrees that there is a pressing need for the situation
    to be resolved soon.

    But he said because all the villages along the course of the river
    contribute to the pollution and sewage problem, finding a solution
    will require a coordinated effort of various local and national
    authorities. "We have spoken to the authorities millions of times,
    but nothing is done," he said. "This is a major health problem. It's
    a problem we cannot solve alone. There must be cooperation. The
    government must take a major decision if this is to be solved."

    Officials from the Environment Ministry were unavailable to comment
    on the situation Thursday.
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