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SOMALIA WASTE IMPORTS (SOMALIA CASE)

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SOMALIA WASTE IMPORTS (SOMALIA CASE)

 

imports from Italy

 

A. IDENTIFICATION

 

1. The Issue

 

During the Somali civil war hazardous waste was dumped in this African nation by industrialized countries. The alleged

perpetrators were Italian and Swiss firms who supposedly entered into a contract with the Somali government to dump waste in the war

ravaged African nation. The issue of dumping in Somalia is two fold in that it is both a legal question and a moral question. First, is there a violation of international treaties in the export of hazardous waste to Somalia. Second, is it ethically questionable to negotiate a hazardous waste disposal contract with a country in the midst of a protracted civil war and with a government that can best be described as tenuous and factionalized?

 

2. Description

 

With the abdication of President Siad Barre in 1989, the country of Somalia was thrown in a state of anarchy. The country is currently ruled by a series of warlords each holding a small section of the country. The rival factions have been at war with each other since the mid-eighties and a mission by the United Nations to stabilize the country has now ended in apparent

political failure. The war led to a serious famine that was solved by the intervention. Less publicized was the exploitation of the

Somalian crisis by firms who specialize in the disposal of hazardous waste.

 

In the fall of 1992 reports began to appear in the international media concerning unnamed European firms that were illegally dumping waste in Somalia. By most reports, several

thousand tons of waste, mostly processed industrial waste, had already been dumped there. It was also reported that waste was seen being dumped off the Somali coast into the Indian Ocean. To further compound the country's environmental problems, a storage

facility in northern Somalia filled with pesticides had been destroyed during the war. The spilt chemicals and resulting fire

poisoned one of the few sources of drinking water in the famine ravaged country.

 

What caused controversy in 1992, however, was reports of a contract established between a Swiss firm, Achair Partners, and an

Italian firm, Progresso, with Nur Elmy Osman, who claimed to be the Somali Minister of Health under an interim government headed by Ali

Mahdi Muhammad. Osman had been a health official in the Barre government, but allegedly was no longer recognized as a government

official by Ali Mahdi. Osman had supposedly entered into an $80 million contract in December of 1991, whereby the two firms would

be allowed to build a 10 million ton storage facility for hazardous waste. The waste would first be burned in an incinerator to be

built on the same site and then stored in the facility at the rate of 500,000 tons a year.

 

Reports of the alleged contract outraged the world community. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) investigated the

matter at the urging of Somalia's neighbors and the Swiss and Italian governments. What ensued was a period of accusations as both firms denied entering into any agreement, Osman denied signing

any contract and the Swiss and Italian governments said they had no knowledge of the two firms activities.

 

As a result of the UNEP's investigation, the contract was declared null and the facility was never built. Still it became apparent to the UNEP's director Dr. Mustafa Tolba that the firms of Achair Partners and Progresso were set up specifically as

fictitious companies by larger industrial firms to dispose of hazardous waste. At one point Dr. Tolba declared that the UNEP was

dealing with a mafia.

 

Beyond the obvious ethical question of trying to coerce a

hazardous waste agreement out of an unstable country like Somalia,

the attempt by Swiss and Italian firms to dump waste in Somalia

violates international treaties to which both countries are

signatories. Switzerland has signed and ratified the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous

Wastes and their Disposal (see BASEL case). Somalia and Italy have not signed the Basel Convention. The Basel Convention prohibits

(among other things) waste trade between countries that have signed the Convention and countries that have not signed the Convention

unless a bilateral waste agreement has been negotiated. Somalia and Switzerland had no such bilateral agreement. The Basel Convention also prohibits shipping hazardous waste to a war zone.

 

Although not a signatory to the Basel Convention, Italy has

signed the fourth Lome Convention. It is the only country in Europe to do so. Italy signed the Lome Convention in order to "prove" its good intentions with regard to the disposal hazardous

waste. No reason is given for Italy's failure to sign the Basel Convention (see NIGERIA case). Article 39 of the Lome Convention

clearly prohibits the export of waste to Africa as well as the Caribbean and the Pacific.

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