Hungary Releases Toxic Plant Director; Factory To Reopen


By Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief reporting from Kolontar, Hungary

Worthy News photographer and journalist Agnes R. Bos preparing to enter disaster zone, near Kolontar Hungary.

KOLONTAR, HUNGARY (Worthy News)– Hungarian authorities released on Wednesday, October 13, the director of an alumina plant that flooded several towns with toxic waste, killing nine people and injuring at least 120 others. Government officials say production at the metals plant will resume by Friday, October 15, despite concerns among local residents about more flooding.

A judge dismissed government demands that the head of the plant, Zoltan Bakonyi, be charged with negligence after some 800,000 cubic meters toxic mud spilled from the factory’s reservoir, devastating several villages and towns.

Bakonyi’s attorney Janos Banati said prosecutors failed to argue that his client had not prepared emergency plans for accidents like this one. But, he says, prosecutors will likely appeal the ruling.

Earlier this week, the government took control of the Hungarian Aluminum Production and Trade Company, or MAL Ltd., some 160 kilometers southwest of Budapest.

The government’s national disaster chief, Gyorgy Bakondi, said production at the plant would resume by Friday.

HEATING SYSTEM

Authorities, he said, have already switched on the factory’s heating system, noting that “letting it cool off too much would have caused damage worth billions of forints.”

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban says resuming production at the plant is necessary to generate revenue to compensate victims of the disaster.

Orban has also visited the devastated village of Kolontar.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban meeting an anxious villager who lost her home and even clothing in the disaster in Devecser, Hungary. Photo: Agnes R. Bos for BosNewsLife/Worthy News

Daniel Rad, a young Roma man, has been helping with the cleanup effort. “I came here to help,” he told Worthy News and its news partner BosNewsLife as heavily armed policemen watch nearby. “I do this for free,” he added, “because I believe it’s important to save this village.”

A horse breeder in Kolontar, Sandor Ferenczi, predicted it would be difficult to rebuild his life. “I will never forget what happened” last week, he said, his voice trembling. “After I picked up my son from school, I saw an ocean of red sludge engulfing our home.” He recalled that the prime minister said that a part of the village “will not be rebuild, but instead become a memorial to the victims.”

There are concerns of more toxic flooding after cracks were found in another part of the factory’s reservoir.

Authorities have been building an emergency dam to prevent the flood of more toxic waste, a byproduct of bauxite, which is used to manufacture aluminum.

The sludge has made its way to one of Europe’s main waterways, the Danube River. Environmentalists warn that it has the potential to contaminate drinking water supplies for millions of people downstream.

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