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Thousands protest in Mauritius over dead dolphins, demand resignations


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Thousands protest in Mauritius over dead dolphins, demand resignations

By Giulia Paravicini

 

2020-08-29T111738Z_1_LYNXMPEG7S0AK_RTROPTP_4_MAURITIUS-ENVIRONMENT-PROTESTS.JPG

FILE PHOTO: A general view shows the bulk carrier ship MV Wakashio, that ran aground on a reef, at Riviere des Creoles, Mauritius, in this handout image obtained by Reuters on August 10, 2020. French Army command/Handout via REUTERS

 

(Reuters) - Thousands of protesters demonstrated in the Mauritius capital Port Louis on Saturday to demand an investigation into an oil spill from a Japanese ship and the mysterious death of at least 40 dolphins that have been found near the site of the spill.

 

Environmentalists have called for an investigation into whether the dolphins died as a result of the spill caused when the bulk carrier, the MV Wakashio, struck a coral reef last month.

 

One protestor held a banner with a dolphin covered in oil reading "our lives matter" and another held one calling for the government to resign. Mauritian flags were waved across the packed square of St Louis Cathedral.

 

"We do not trust the government and the diluted information they've been feeding us regarding the management and responses to the oil spill," Fabiola Monty, 33 a Mauritian environmental scientist, told Reuters from the square.

 

The government has said it will carry out autopsies on all the dead dolphins and has set up a commission to look into the oil spill. Two investigations are being carried out: one by the police on the crew's responsibilities and one by a senior Shipping Ministry official on what happened to the ship.

 

So far veterinarians have examined only two of the mammals' carcasses, which bore signs of injury but no trace of oil in their bodies, according to preliminary autopsy results.

 

The autopsy on the first two was conducted by the government-run Albion Fisheries Research Centre.

 

Autopsy results on 25 dolphins that washed ashore Wednesday and Thursday are expected in the coming days, according to Jasvin Sok Appadu from the Fisheries Ministry.

 

Local environmental group Eco-Sud, which took part in Saturday's protest, said in a statement on Friday that representatives from civil society should be present during the autopsies and called for a second opinion from independent specialists.

 

(Reporting by Giulia Paravicini in Addis Ababa; Editing by Frances Kerry)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-08-30
 
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These protests had little to do with dolphins. It's more to do with a corrupt and inept government. The level of corruption and theft by the two parties/families  that have run the country for the last 100 years is breathtaking. The theft has become so brazen that the bone idle Mauritians even felt compelled to get off their butts and stop drinking rum long enough to go and protest.

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