Thursday, September 5, 2013
Ghana's dead whales: Oil linked denied
Ghana has dismissed accusations that oil
operations could have caused the deaths of
several whales washed up on beaches over the
past week.
A local environmental group said that the whales had
only started to appear since oil production began in
2009.
The Friends of the Nation group called for a full
enquiry into the deaths.
Oil firms refused to comment but the Environment
Protection Agency said there were no links between
the oil industry and the beached whales.
It noted that such incidents occur around the world,
not just in Ghana.
The EPA also said it was groundless to say that most
dead whales and other marine species were found
near oil rigs.
It said it was not clear what had caused the deaths
which were a matter "of much concern" to the
agency.
A Friends of the Nation statement entitled "Save Our
Whales" is being carried prominently on Ghanaian
websites.
"Though the death of whales is not an uncommon
phenomenon, the frequency within the last four
years is worrying," it says.
It says that five dead whales appeared in the past
week, taking the total since 2009 to 16.
The BBC's Akwasi Sarpong says that on the beach in
Kokrobite, a coastal village just outside Accra, crowds
of curious people holding their noses had gathered to
catch a glimpse of the dead mammals.
Nearby, chief fisherman Nii Asaase Ayittey
supervised as boys from the village dug a deep hole
to bury a rotten carcass.
"It is a blessing for us because it will bring our
fishermen more fish to catch," he told the BBC .
In the next village of Dampase Langma, fisherman
Sammy Tetteh Otchie said he had never seen
anything like it before.
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