Stop exporting toxic chemicals to poorer countries: UN

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UNB, Dhaka :
At least 30 States exported hazardous substances last year that had been banned locally because of health and environmental reasons to Latin America, Africa and Asia which a UN expert says must end protecting poorer nations.
The practice of wealthy States exporting their banned toxic chemicals to poorer nations lacking the capacity to control the risks is deplorable and must end, the UN expert said on Thursday
“States exporting banned chemicals without a strong public interest justification are in violation of their extraterritorial obligations under international human rights law, including their obligations relating to a healthy environment and safe and healthy working conditions,” said UN Special Rapporteur on toxics Baskut Tuncak.
A total of 35 fellow experts of the Human Rights Council endorsed the call of the UN expert, according to a statement issued from Geneva.
The UN expert cited the recent General Comment No. 24 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR).
Tuncak said, “Failing to address this longstanding exploitation is discrimination, pure and simple.”
The ability to manufacture and export toxic substances banned from use domestically is one, albeit large, element of how States have institutionalised externalities through discriminatory
national laws and an outdated system of global governance for chemicals and wastes, said the UN Special Rapporteur on toxics.
The expert said that wealthier nations often create double standards that allow the trade and use of prohibited substances in parts of the world where regulations are less stringent, externalising the health and environmental impacts on the most vulnerable.
The racialised nature of these standards cannot be ignored, he said, as the dangers are externalised to communities of African descent and other people of colour – a grave concern which also exists internally in exporting countries with respect to the siting of polluting industries and dumping of hazardous waste.
“In nearly every case there is no legitimate public interest justification,” Tuncak said.
“These loopholes are a political concession to industry, allowing their chemical manufacturers to profit from inevitably poisoned workers and communities abroad, all the while importing cheaper products through global supply chains and fueling unsustainable consumption and production patterns. It is long-overdue that States stop this exploitation.”
In reports from Denmark, Germany, and the United Kingdom, the Special Rapporteur has highlighted dangers posed by the exportation of toxic chemicals, and communicated similar concerns to Canada and Switzerland.
Tuncak has also made similar recommendations to Brazil regarding communities poisoned by exports. In the face of such violations, some individuals were forced to defend their communities, putting themselves at further risk in a country which ranks among the world’s deadliest for environmental rights defenders.
“The EU continues to export such pesticides and toxic industrial chemicals, resulting in widespread infringements of human rights to life, dignity and freedom from cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment in low and middle-income countries.”
The expert commended France for recent legislation stopping the export of chemicals prohibited domestically. “France has taken the right approach to ending these double standards, a practice that other EU and OECD members must emulate,” he said.
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