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Hungarian sludge spill reaches branch of Danube

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Xing Cai

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Locals attempt to remove toxic sludge in the flooded village of Kolontar, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 7, 2010.


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An aerial view shows houses affected by a toxic red sludge spill from a Hungarian alumina plant, in Devecser, near Ajka, 100 miles (160 kilometres)
southwest of Budapest October 7, 2010.



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An aerial view shows a toxic red sludge spill from a Hungarian alumina plant, near Ajka, 100 miles (160 kilometres) southwest of Budapest October 7, 2010.


 
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Xing Cai

Guest

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Gypsum is poured into the Marcal River in an attempt to neutralise the alkaline contamination from a red sludge spill that has killed all water life in the river, in Morichida, 160 km (99 miles) west of Budapest October 8, 2010.


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Locals cross a pontoon bridge next to a broken bridge in the flooded village of Kolontar, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 7, 2010.


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A rescue worker walks in toxic sludge in the flooded village of Kolontar, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 7, 2010.


 
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Xing Cai

Guest

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A rescue worker searches for bodies in a destroyed house in the flooded village of Kolontar, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 7, 2010.


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An elderly man tries to clean up his home in the flooded village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 6, 2010.


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Shovels sit in toxic sludge in the flooded village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 6, 2010.


 
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Keiji Maeda

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A woman walks out from a destroyed house in the flooded village of Kolontar, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 6, 2010.


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Locals struggle to clear up toxic sludge in the flooded village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 6, 2010.


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A man battles toxic sludge in the flooded village of Kolontar, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 6, 2010.


 
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Red 6

Guest

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A man stands in his destroyed home in the flooded village of Kolontar, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest October 6, 2010.


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A Greenpeace activist takes a sample of the toxic sludge in a town near Ajkai, 160 km (100 miles) southwest of Budapest October 5, 2010.


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Rescue workers clear up toxic sludge in the flooded village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest, October 5, 2010.


 
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Red 6

Guest

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A resident rescues a cat from toxic sludge that flooded the village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest, October 5, 2010.


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Locals clear up toxic sludge in the flooded village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest, October 5, 2010. The Hungarian government has declared a state of emergency in three counties in western Hungary due to an alumina sludge spill which killed at least three people, news agency MTI reported on Tuesday.


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The water mark left by knee-deep toxic sludge is seen on a resident's house after the sludge flooded the village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest, October 5, 2010. The Hungarian government has declared a state of emergency in three counties in western Hungary due to an alumina sludge spill which killed at least three people, news agency MTI reported on Tuesday.


 
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Red 6

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A resident rescues a cat from toxic sludge that flooded the village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest, October 5, 2010. The Hungarian government has declared a state of emergency in three counties in western Hungary due to an alumina sludge spill which killed at least three people, news agency MTI reported on Tuesday.


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A rescue worker is reflected in toxic sludge in the flooded village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest, October 5, 2010.


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Rescue workers clear up toxic sludge in the flooded village of Devecser, 150 km (93 miles) west of Budapest, October 5, 2010.


 
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Cao Pi

Guest
Hungary spill plant to restart, villagers return


Hungary spill plant to restart, villagers return


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A view of the evacuated village of Kolontar, 150 km (93.2 miles) west of Budapest, October 12, 2010. Credit: Reuters/Sandor H.Szabo/Hungarian News Agency

BUDAPEST | Fri Oct 15, 2010 6:13am EDT

BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Hungary was due on Friday to restart the plant that flooded parts of the country with toxic sludge and resettle villagers on contaminated land, despite warnings from environmentalists that the area may not be safe. A spill of industrial waste last week at the alumina plant in western Hungary, owned by firm MAL Zrt, killed nine people, injured over 120 and polluted a tributary of the Danube when the wall of a sludge reservoir failed.

The government, which has seized control of the plant, said it would restart it on Friday. Disaster crews said people evacuated from the nearby village of Kolontar would be allowed to move back to their homes in the afternoon. Environmental group Greenpeace urged the government to keep the plant shut because the cause of the disaster was still unclear, and said it was "entirely irresponsible" to let villagers return home because no data showed the area was safe.

"Greenpeace Hungary asks the government to suspend the plan to restart production at the plant until the causes of the disaster are clarified and environmental and health risks decrease significantly," the environmental group said. Villagers would be allowed to return to Kolontar from midday, and were advised to wear a dust mask at all times, said a spokeswoman for disaster crews, Gyorgyi Tottos. "We have been offered a large shipment of dust masks, so there is more than enough for everyone," she said.

"It is mandatory to wear them, although there are no sanctions for not wearing a mask." "Cleanup crews and heavy machinery are at work, which stirs up the dust even more," she told Reuters, adding it was up to every resident's individual judgment whether to return or not. She said the northern wall of the reservoir, which cracked on Saturday prompting the evacuation, had not shown further dislocation on Friday after the crack widened a few centimeters on Thursday.

Crews in Kolontar had built a 600-meter-long emergency dam crossing the village to protect the area from a potential second sludge wave, estimated at 500,000 cubic meters in case of another reservoir wall failure. Hungarian police secured MAL's premises on Tuesday and took over MAL's information systems after parliament rushed through emergency legislation allowing the center-right government to take control of the company and its assets.

(Reporting by Krisztina Than and Marton Dunai)


 
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