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Protest over Canada's garbage dumped in Philippines brought to the UN in Geneva

13 May 2015, Geneva, Switzerland - International environmental organisations brought their protest against Canada for their refusal to take back the 50 shipment containers filled with household waste dumped in the Philippines almost two years ago, raised the matter at a high-level meeting of the Basel Convention and marched from that meeting to the Permanent Mission of Canada, in Geneva, Switzerland. 

Environmental justice groups Ban Toxics (BT), the Basel Action Network (BAN), the International POPs Elimination Network (IPEN), the Pesticide Action Network, and EarthJustice, participated in calling on the Canadian government to comply with their obligations under the Basel Convention on the Transboundary Movement of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal, to which both the Philippines and Canada are both Parties, to take back their illegal shipment and to prosecute the exporter. BAN Toxics director Richard Gutierrez delivered a stinging speech before the delegates representing the 183 country members of the Basel Convention. 

"Unless Canada is compelled to take back its waste and prosecute its criminal traffic, a great injustice will have occurred on the watch of everyone in this room," said Gutierrez. "We cannot allow that to happen."

Activists attending the Basel Convention in Geneva protest in front of Canadian Embassy.

The Basel Convention prohibits trade of toxic and other wastes unless a country consents to it, and it requires the exporting country to take back illegal shipments and treat them as criminal but the Canadian government is dodging its responsibility by saying that they lack the domestic legislation to prosecute the exporter and it is therefore a "private matter" between the Canadian exporter, Chronic Inc., and its Filipino counterpart, Chronic Plastics. 

"Diplomatic bullying has snuffed the Philippines' resolve to enforce Basel. But even if the Philippines does not complain, such non-compliance cannot simply be forgotten. Bilateral non-Compliance is not acceptable under the Convention," said Atty. Gutierrez. 

"The Basel Convention was created to prevent rich and powerful countries from dumping their wastes on economically weaker countries," said Basel Action Network (BAN) executive director Jim Puckett. "Canada has acted as if it is a leader of the Convention and yet they have failed to properly transpose its rules into their national laws and have utterly failed to show that they really are serious about international waste dumping. Their stance is shameful.

After his state visit to the United States and Canada, Philippine President Benigno Aquino III recently declared that the Canadian waste will be burned or buried in the Philippines. 

BT fears that disposing the Canadian waste in Philippine soil will not only set precedent for other rich countries' to dump their waste in the Philippines, exposing the surrounding communities with toxic fumes emitted through cement kilns and hazardous leachate from landfill disposal. 

BAN and Ban Toxics will be lodging an official non-Compliance charge against Canada with the Secretariat of the Basel Convention.

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For more information contact

Jim Puckett, Executive Director of Basel Action Network,
email: jpuckett@ban.org, phone: +1 (206) 652-5555. 

Richard Gutierrez, Executive Director, BAN Toxics,
email: rgutierrez@bantoxics.org, phone: +1 (587) 351-2635.

About Basel Action Network 
Founded in 1997, the Basel Action Network is a 501(c)3 charitable organization of the United States, based in Seattle, WA. BAN is the world's only organization focused on confronting the global environmental justice and economic inefficiency of toxic trade and its devastating impacts. Today, BAN serves as the information clearinghouse on the subject of waste trade for journalists, academics, and the general public. Through its investigations, BAN uncovered the tragedy of hazardous electronic waste dumping in developing countries. For more information, see www.BAN.org or blog.BAN.org.

About Basel Toxics 
BAN Toxics (BT) is an independent non-government environmental organization focused on the advancement of environmental justice, children's health, and toxics elimination. Working closely with partner communities and other NGOs in both the local and international levels, BT endeavors to reduce and eliminate the use of harmful toxins through education campaigns, training and awareness-raising, and policy-building and advocacy programs.

BT acknowledges the support of the Swedish Society for Nature Conservation in its work on global chemicals management issues.