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Beaches of 'Bloody Tarawa' littered with rotting trash piles
Bakersfield Californian ^ | 5/16/04 | Charles J. Handley - AP

Posted on 05/16/2004 12:22:17 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

TARAWA, Kiribati (AP) - On the beach at "Bloody Tarawa," where U.S. Marines died by the hundreds, the broken bottles, crushed boxes and plastic bags are now piling up by the millions.

Rotting under the equatorial sun, the garbage of an open dump is spreading over a section of World War II's Red Beach, a strip of sand hallowed in American military history.

It's a sign of the crisis of solid waste that threatens to overwhelm the tiny atolls of the Pacific, tropical "paradises" whose beauty already is often marred by layers of debris - rubbish with nowhere to go.

Here in Tarawa atoll, a curl of small, narrow and overcrowded coral islands ringing an aquamarine lagoon, the Kiribati government is making slow progress, opening one trash landfill and building another.

But island governments everywhere say they need more help.

"We urgently need access to effective and affordable technologies, including recycling equipment, before this issue of wastes becomes critical," Jagdish Koonjul of Mauritius, head of the Alliance of Small Island States, told a U.N. conference in March.

"Our islands are being 'wasted,'" warned environmental experts from Fiji's University of the South Pacific in a report last fall.

Sandy, palmy, steamy Kiribati is among the smallest of small island states - a mere 266 square miles of dry land, often inaccessible, on 32 atolls spread over 2 million square miles of ocean, midway between Hawaii and Australia.

The shortage of space forces hard choices, like putting the first engineered landfill in a location that had been earmarked for national parkland.

"For a country like us, who don't have land, we are running out of options," said Tererei Abete-Reema, Kiribati's deputy environment director.

In 1997, the option was historic Red Beach, on the lagoon side of the Tarawa atoll's Betio island. An area several hundred yards long was designated as a dump.

Sixty years ago, on Nov. 20, 1943, the U.S. 2nd Marine Division came ashore there to seize Tarawa, in World War II's first major amphibious assault on heavily fortified Japanese positions.

The Marines' eventual victory was costly: A mistaken landing at low tide left them exposed offshore on the coral reef, under deadly Japanese fire. More than 3,400 Americans were killed or wounded in four days of fighting. Only 146 of 4,800 Japanese troops and Korean laborers survived.

Bunkers and rusting landing craft still dot the shore and reefs, but history has moved on. The Gilbert Islands, a former British colony, gained independence as Kiribati - pronounced Ki-ra-bas - in 1979, to subsist by selling coconut products, aquarium fish and licenses to fishing fleets. The impoverished population, meantime, exploded to today's 90,000.

At least 30,000 are jammed onto 282-acre Betio - pronounced Bay-sho - many in plywood-and-thatch shacks, with no sewage system, with contaminated groundwater, and with the accumulating garbage of Red Beach.

"Aluminum cans alone - they're throwing away 100 tons of aluminum cans a year in Tarawa," said Alice Leney of the Foundation for the Peoples of the South Pacific, an aid group helping Kiribati manage its waste.

Plastic bottles, bags and other packaging are piling up just as fast - at five times the rate of the early 1990s in small island states, the U.N. Environment Program estimates. Even medical waste ends up in the open dumps.

Islanders blame cultural habit in part. A people who not long ago tossed coconut husks and fish bones out their huts' back doors are now, in effect, doing the same with waste that is not biodegradable - from beer cans to worn-out vehicles.

"I live near the sea, and when the pile of garbage outside gets too high, I dump it in the sea," Tenea Taoieta, 29, a fuel depot manager, told a visiting journalist. "Sometimes it washes back up and smells."

One survey suggested that under half the 6,500 tons of solid waste Tarawa produces each year is carted by town council workers to the government's six surface dumps. Much of the rest - what isn't burned - litters the islands in uncontrolled heaps, between houses, along beaches, sometimes to be carried off by the tides and deposited elsewhere.

To contain the Red Beach overflow, a seawall was built at the dump, with loan money from the Asian Development Bank.

That continuing, $10 million bank program has also financed the design and building of the two landfills - one just completed 4 miles east of Betio on South Tarawa, and the other under construction 4 miles farther east on that larger island.

The landfill areas, reclaimed from the lagoon, are holes of a few acres each, ringed by sandbagged walls. The plan is to cover each day's deposit of trash with a layer of sand until the hole is filled.

The first site already has problems: The Japanese construction company did not install a liner in the bottom to keep lagoon water out and to keep contaminants from seeping into the lagoon.

Planners hope to find a private enterprise to operate the landfills, just as Leney's foundation hopes to interest recyclers in Kiribati's unclaimed aluminum cans, plastic bottles and cardboard. Potential profits may be too small, however, to justify costly recycling technology, and transport costs too great to justify shipping out the castoffs.

In hopes of laying the groundwork, the foundation has launched a campaign - "Kaoki Mange!" Gilbertese for "Send the Rubbish Back!" - and set up collection points for recyclables.

"We've been trying to build a model for atolls and take it to the Marshall Islands and Tuvalu," Leney said, referring to two nearby island nations.

In a place so poor and remote, "it won't be easy" to subdue the growing mountains of waste, said environment deputy Abete-Reema.

"We'll probably stumble," she said. "It took us almost a decade to get this far."

For years more, then, scavengers will scramble over odorous mounds at Red Beach, finding poor men's prizes of worn tires or firewood on a narrow piece of real estate that young Americans once bought at the ultimate price.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: beaches; bloody; littered; rotting; semperfi; tarawa; trashpiles
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1 posted on 05/16/2004 12:22:17 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: *SemperFi

Sad Marine ping


2 posted on 05/16/2004 12:25:16 PM PDT by anymouse
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: NormsRevenge

I believe "Kaoki Mange!" is also the battle-cry of the Daschle re-election committee.


4 posted on 05/16/2004 12:27:58 PM PDT by anonymous_user (Telling the truth means you never have to change your story.)
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To: NormsRevenge
Bacteria grow at a static, then logarithmic phase, then a senescent phase as the organisms byproducts' kill themselves.

The islanders are following the laws of nature. Nothing like a few Jihadists added that would improve the situation.

5 posted on 05/16/2004 12:33:44 PM PDT by vetvetdoug
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To: NormsRevenge

Nowhere did this article mention where the non-biodegradable matter comes from. It is not manufactured on the atoll. One solution to 'enjoying' drinks in aluminum cans would be mandatory recycling laws - recycling it off the island, by the carriers bringing the new tons of Heinekin and Pepsi.

When I was there in 1989, the saddest part of my visit was to see the derelict memorial to the American servicemen who fought and died there. It was just one tombstone-sized monument in an overgrown enclosure. The Japanese had a small cemetery, which was maintained well. In my memory that cemetery is near where the dump mentioned in this article is located.


6 posted on 05/16/2004 12:36:03 PM PDT by maica (Member of Republican Attack Machine, RAM, previously known as the VRWC)
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To: TonyRo76; bkwells; GATOR NAVY; SAMWolf

Thanks Tony for the Tarawa Ping.


7 posted on 05/16/2004 1:36:44 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: snippy_about_it

TARAWA
South Pacific , 20 November, 1943


8 posted on 05/16/2004 2:00:38 PM PDT by SAMWolf (Vengence is mine says the Lord, but I'm busy, so I sent the US Marines.)
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To: NormsRevenge

You ought to see Mount St. Lucie, here in south east Florida.
The average elevation is 12 feet above sea level. The local dump is about 100 feet high. It is by far the highest point in the county. Same thing all over Florida. Garbbage dumps are the same as many pyramids in central and south America, little more then garbbage dumps.


9 posted on 05/16/2004 2:21:05 PM PDT by Joe Boucher (G.W. Bush in 2004)
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

Comment #11 Removed by Moderator

To: NormsRevenge

There is no environmental or waste crisis. This is nothing more than pathetic government. 6500 tons of solid waste a year is only 125 tons a week. A small garbage scow can carry 150 tons. Haul it a hundred miles offshore to the deepwater and stop living like pigs.


12 posted on 05/16/2004 2:54:43 PM PDT by azcap
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To: TonyRo76

Thanks Tony. I sorry we didn't have time for lunch before I moved out here. :-(


13 posted on 05/16/2004 3:23:13 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: snippy_about_it

Thanks for the ping. I saw this article in Sunday's Stars and Stripes. Pretty sad.


14 posted on 05/16/2004 10:09:15 PM PDT by GATOR NAVY
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To: anymouse
"60 years afterwards only garbage piles remain where Americans fought and died for freedom". No doubt AP will soon be following with articles such as "30 years later Vietnam still recovering from Agent Orange poisoning" "The effects of liberation, Grenada still recovering..." and "Military base EPA violations" etc., etc., etc.

And you fall for this S#it?! In the fight for self-determination, freedom, capitalism and national defense the western media is most definitely NOT your ally.

15 posted on 05/16/2004 10:38:04 PM PDT by Justa (Politically Correct is morally wrong.)
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To: Justa

Just curious...did you actually read the article?


16 posted on 05/16/2004 11:18:44 PM PDT by GATOR NAVY
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To: GATOR NAVY

How many 3rd world locales are overloaded with trash? Do you actually believe the AP cares a rat's-A about Tarawa? Give it a few days, you'll get it.


17 posted on 05/16/2004 11:27:56 PM PDT by Justa (Politically Correct is morally wrong.)
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To: Justa
Give it a few days, you'll get it.

That's ok, I already get what I need to get. And that is either 1) You didn't read the article and just assumed (you know that old ass outta u and me thing) it was blaming the problem on the battle, or 2) you did read the article but have no comphrension skills.

18 posted on 05/17/2004 2:37:09 AM PDT by GATOR NAVY
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Comment #19 Removed by Moderator

To: TonyRo76
What's it like up in the great Northwest?

It's like those two weeks you're experiencing now, only all the time. :-)

20 posted on 05/17/2004 10:47:25 AM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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