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April 19, 2005
Notes to editors
(1) A PDF file of the letter is attached with this press release.
(2) The 51 year old Great Belt ferry Kong Frederik IX (now Frederik), left Denmark after a heated debate about its destiny. The seller had stated his intentions to the scrap it and several bids had been given by Danish scrapping companies. Despite this, the ferry was sold to postbox company in St Vincent whereafter Jupiter Ship Management promptly took over the ship. Just last year, Jupiter Ship Management illegally exported a Danish ship -formerly owned by the Lauritzen Company - to Alang for breaking. The cover story was to use the former gas tanker as a water carrier. It took only one month for the ship to reach Alang. Despite an overwhelming amount of scrap-indications, the poorly resourced municipality of Korsør did not prevent the "Frederik" from leaving Danish harbour on the 16 march 2005. Despite assurances of continued use and refurbishing at a Greek shipyard, Kong Frederik IX reached Suez on the 10 April and continued on a southbound direction. On 16 april 2005, Minister Connie Hedegaard formally requested the Indian Minister for the Environment Mr. A. Raja to refer the ship back to Denmark to be stripped for hazardous waste. The Danish minister for the Environment Connie Hedegaard has also announced that she will file a complaint with police, should the ship turn up on Asian scrapping yards.
(3) The Basel Convention requires the consent of the importing, exporting and transit states to make any export of hazardous waste legal. As Denmark did not consent to the export, the export constitutes illegal traffic in accordance with Article 9 of the Convention. India, in accordance with Article 4, paragraph 4 must thus "take appropriate legal, administrative and other measures to implement and enforce the provisions of this Convention, including measures to prevent and punish conduct in contravention of the Convention."
(4) Last October, the Basel Convention Conference of Parties adopted a decision of 163 countries, of which Denmark and India were part, reaffirming that ships can be waste under the Convention and that Parties are obligated to fulfil their Basel Convention obligations with respect to ships. VII/21 on the Environmentally Sound Management of ship dismantling states: "The Conference of the Parties ....Reminds the Parties to fulfil their obligations under the Basel Convention where applicable, in particular obligations with respect to prior informed consent, their minimization of transboundary movements of hazardous wastes and the principles of environmentally sound management;"