Sri Lanka returns containers of illegal waste to Britain

Sri Lanka
has shipped back to Britain container-loads of waste that the government said
was brought into the island in violation of international laws governing the
shipping of hazardous material.
The 21
containers -- holding up to 260 tonnes of rubbish -- first arrived by ship in
the capital Colombo's main port between September 2017 and March 2018, customs
told AFP, adding that they departed Sri Lanka on Saturday.
They were
meant to carry used mattresses, carpets and rugs, but had also contained
hospital waste, officials said.
"The
shipper had agreed to take back these 21 containers," customs spokesman
Sunil Jayaratne told AFP on Sunday.
"We
are working to secure compensation from those responsible for getting the
containers into the country."
Customs
did not reveal the type of hospital waste, but previous illegally imported
containers had included rags, bandages and body parts from mortuaries,
according to officials.
Another
242 containers from Britain, which the government said was carrying illegal
garbage in violation of international law, remains abandoned at the same port
and at a free trade zone outside the capital.
They
arrived in 2017 and 2018.
The
government is currently engaged in legal action against the shipper to have the
242 containers removed from the country.
A Sri
Lankan investigation last year into nearly 3,000 tonnes of illegally imported
hazardous waste found the importer had reshipped about 180 tonnes to India and
Dubai in 2017 and 2018.
Several
Asian countries, sick of being the wealthy world's rubbish dump, have in the
past two years turned back container-loads of waste from foreign shores.