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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
'Close the windows': Zouk power plant sparks cancer fears |
2022-10-20 |
[An Nahar] After losing four relatives to respiratory illness, Zeina Matar fled her hometown north of Leb![]() 's capital where she says a decaying power plant generates little electricity but very deadly pollution. Thick black smoke sometimes billows from its red-and-white chimneys, leaving a grey haze in the air above the Zouk Mikael industrial district where the toxins remain trapped by a nearby mountain chain. Zeina, aged 40, says she lost her younger sister and a cousin to pulmonary fibrosis and that two of her uncles died of lung cancer years earlier. They all lived near the plant where, experts and residents believe, air pollution means people are more likely to develop cancer and respiratory disease than anywhere else in the crisis-torn country. "We could die tomorrow," said Zeina, who has relocated to Lebanon's south to escape the plant's emissions. A Greenpeace study found that the surrounding Jounieh area ranked fifth in the Arab world and 23rd globally for cities most contaminated by nitrogen dioxide, a dangerous pollutant released when fuel is burnt. The environmental group's 2018 study singled out the Zouk plant, built in the 1940s, as well as cars on a busy motorway and privately owned electricity generators as the main causes of pollution. The walls of Zeina's balconies in her old Zouk Mikael home are blackened by the smoke, and laundry she used to hang outside would be damaged by toxic chemicals emanating from the plant, she said. "Whenever they refill the station with fuel oil, we would close the windows," Zeina said. "The smell is unbearable." |
Posted by:Fred |