Guimaras oil spill raises health concerns
DoH checking if man’s death linked to oil fumes By Joel Nito
Agence France-Presse
Last updated 08:09pm (Mla time) 08/24/2006
NUEVA VALENCIA, Guimaras -- (UPDATE) Hundreds of people have fallen sick and one man has died in Guimaras province following the country's worst ever oil spill, health officials said Thursday.
The health department has sent medical teams to the island province, which bore the brunt of the disaster and where 329 people have complained of a range of health problems including skin irritation and respiratory problems.
Health Secretary Francisco Duque arrived in nearby Iloilo City on Thursday to see firsthand the conditions following the sinking of the oil tanker Solar I off Guimaras on August 11, which has discharged more than 50,000 gallons of industrial oil into the pristine seas.
The tanker, said to be resting on the seabed with 450,000 gallons still in its hold, has been described as an ecological time bomb by environmentalists.
Petron Corp, the company that contracted the tanker, said it would continue to provide the assistance necessary to clean up contaminated coastline.
"We know there are health problems but we are addressing them by coordinating medical assistance with the local health office and national health department," Petron chief executive Nicasio Alcantara said in a press conference in Manila.
Four United States coast guard experts and one from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency also arrived in Iloilo on Thursday to assess the damage and see how they could help.
Two of them flew over the area while two others traveled by boat to Guimaras.
They join Japanese experts who have already been sent to assist in the disaster.
Duque said the department would look into the case of Rogelio Dalida, a fisherman from this town who reportedly died of a heart attack after inhaling oil fumes.
He had been suffering from asthma and the fumes could have aggravated his condition, Duque said.
Nueva Valencia Mayor Diosdado Gonzaga confirmed a man in his town died last week but said more tests were needed to determine if his heart attack was really brought on by the oil spill or not.
Duque said the health department would also look into hundreds of complaints by Guimaras residents of health problems possibly arising from the oil slick.
These range from skin irritation and respiratory problems to stomach aches and nausea, Duque said.
Two health department toxicologists have been sent to Guimaras to look into the possibility of relocating some coastal residents away from the shore.
Duque has warned residents exposure to the oil could lead to illnesses and advised them not to eat any marine products taken from the polluted waters. Residents have been forced to use improvised spill booms, made of bamboo and dried grass to try to prevent black sludge washing up onto beaches. They were also using buckets and shovels to scoop the sludge from the beaches.
Oil has contaminated more than 300 kilometers (200 miles) of coastline on Guimaras Island and is now threatening Negros, the country's fourth-largest island, as well as Panay.
The oil has also destroyed 454 hectares (1,120 acres) of mangroves and 58 hectares of seaweed farms.
Defense Secretary Avelino Cruz, who heads a task force on the oil spill, said 3,700 families were affected by the disaster and that tourism to the island, once known for its pristine beaches, had also been hit hard.
The government set up a commission of inquiry into the disaster on Wednesday and has given it three days to submit an initial report.
The spill is already regarded as the worst environmental disaster in the history of the Philippines, stretching more than 10 nautical miles and putting the livelihoods of thousands of poor fishermen at risk.
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