How Europe's discarded computers are poisoning Africa's kids
The Children of Sodom and Gomorrah
07 December 2009 - Clemens Höges
Thousands of discarded computers end up in Accra, Ghana, where children like Danjuma (left) and Bismarck try to eke out a living by selling the scrap. But the toxic elements in the waste are slowly poisoning them.
In a detailed article published by Der Spiegel in April 2009, Clemes Hoeges describes the consequences of e-waste dumping in Ghana.
These children live amid the refuse of the Internet age, and many of them may die of it. They pull apart the computers, breaking the screens with rocks, then throw the internal electronics onto the fires. Computers contain large amounts of heavy metals, and as the plastic burns, the children also breathe in highly carcinogenic fumes. The computers of the rich are poisoning the children of the poor.
The United Nations estimates that up to 50 million tons of electronic waste are thrown away globally each year. It costs about €3.50 ($5.30) to properly dispose of an old CRT monitor in Germany. But it costs only €1.50 to stick it on a container ship to Ghana.
An international treaty, the Basel Convention, came into effect in 1989. The treaty is sound in its concept, forbidding developed countries from carrying out unauthorized dumping of computer waste in less developed countries. A total of 172 countries have signed the convention, but three of them never ratified it: Haiti, Afghanistan, and the United States. According to estimates by the US Environmental Protection Agency, around 40 million computers are discarded each year in the US alone.
European Union directives with acronyms like WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) and RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances) followed the Basel Convention, and individual countries have signed them into law. Germany's waste disposal laws are among the world's strictest, and shipping computer waste to Ghana can lead to a prison sentence. In theory.
| Website: | http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,665061,00.html |
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