Dead marine life washes ashore in Sri Lanka after burning of X-Press Pearl ship

Sri Lanka's government officials on Sunday said that bodies of more than 10 turtles, a dolphin, seabirds and fish have washed up on the country's beaches after the burning of the X-Press Pearl container ship.


ANI | Colombo | Updated: 06-06-2021 22:37 IST | Created: 06-06-2021 22:36 IST
Dead marine life washes ashore in Sri Lanka after burning of X-Press Pearl ship
Fire stricken Singapore registered MV X-Press Pearl cargo ship (File Photo). Image Credit: ANI
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By Dead Marine Life Washes Ashore In Sri Lanka Colombo [Sri Lanka], June 6 (ANI/Xinhua): Sri Lanka's government officials on Sunday said that bodies of more than 10 turtles, a dolphin, seabirds and fish have washed up on the country's beaches after the burning of the X-Press Pearl container ship.

Department of Wildlife Conservation officials was cited in local media reports as saying an investigation was underway to ascertain the cause of death of these marine species. The dead marine creatures were found on beaches from Puttalam in the northwest to Mirissa in the south. Two turtles with injuries were also found from the Unawatuna beach in the south, according to the media reports.

"Most of the turtles that were found dead on the beaches off Panadura and Wellawatte had their carapaces broken. One dead turtle at the Unawatuna beach was found with injures," an official involved in the investigation told the local Daily Mirror newspaper. A link between the marine life death and the burning of the X-Press Pearl container ship is expected to be the focus in the investigation.

The vessel flying the flag of Singapore was carrying 1,486 containers with 25 tons of nitric acid and several other chemicals and cosmetics when arriving from India on May 15. It sent out a distress call while being close to the Colombo port on May 20 and soon caught fire resulting in Sri Lanka Navy dispatching vessels in efforts to fight the fire onboard.

Sri Lanka's Marine Environment Protection Authority has said the burning of the vessel caused a massive environmental disaster as many beaches were damaged by the debris washing ashore. The Sri Lankan government has said a large number of marine life have been killed as a result of the pollution caused by the fire, while the fisheries department has imposed a temporary ban on fishing from the southern to the western coast.

A criminal probe is presently underway into the cause of the fire on board the X-Press Pearl ship. Earlier Sunday, police said investigators have received the ship's voyage data recorder which contains all the communication dialogues between the captain, the ship's parent company and the local shipping agent.

The navy said an oil spill has not been detected from the burnt vessel, which was about 18.52 km away from the Colombo port. (ANI/Xinhua)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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