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Article

10 Apr 2018

Author:
Piyarach Chongcharoen, Bangkok Post (Thailand)

Thailand: Villagers continue to suffer consequences of lead pollution despite winning lawsuit against mining co.

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"PCD under fire over 'slow' clean-up effort", 10 Apr 2018

The Pollution Control Department (PCD) has been accused of dragging its feet in cleaning up the heavily polluted Klity Creek in Kanchanaburi, still unfinished after a Supreme Administrative Court order five years ago.  Surapong Kongchantuk, director of the Karen Studies and Development Centre, said...the PCD has hardly lifted a finger over the last five years to remove highly toxic sediment left in the waterway.  The court, in January 2013, ordered the PCD to remove the sediment from the creek, which was polluted by waste discharge from a now-defunct lead mine.  Since then, the agency has only partially removed sediment and buried it in a nearby forest, Mr Surapong claimed.  The PCD's clean-up method might also pose a risk to the ecology, wildlife and local people because the sediment could leak back into the creek, he said...[W]ater from Klity Creek also runs downstream to the Kwai Yai and Mae Klong rivers, major water sources for Kanchanaburi and Bangkok, he added...Lead Concentrate Co, was blamed for releasing the lead waste into the creek.  The pollution was exposed in 1998 and the company was soon forced to halt operations.  However, the pollution remains because of a prolonged lawsuit between the company and affected villagers.  Last year, the Supreme Administrative Court's environment section ordered the company to help the PCD in the clean-up effort and pay 151 villagers a total of 36 million baht in compensation, but it reportedly has not done so.  Karen villagers still cannot use Klity Creek - their main water source...