3942 x 2637 px | 33,4 x 22,3 cm | 13,1 x 8,8 inches | 300dpi
Aufnahmedatum:
12. November 2003
Ort:
Alang , Gujarat , India
Weitere Informationen:
Greenpeace activists protest in front of two illegal ships from United Kingdom which are thought to have toxic substances onboard. Campaigners in the inflatable boat are holding up a banner reading 'Clean Toxic Ships Now!' Alang is a census town in Bhavnagar district in the Indian state of Gujarat. In the past three decades, its beaches have become a major worldwide centre for ship breaking. The shipyards at Alang recycle approximately half of all ships salvaged around the world.[1] The yards are located on the Gulf of Khambat, 50 kilometres southeast of Bhavnagar. Large supertankers, car ferries, container ships, and a dwindling number of ocean liners are beached during high tide, and as the tide recedes, hundreds of manual laborers dismantle each ship, salvaging what they can and reducing the rest into scrap. The salvage yards at Alang have generated controversy about working conditions, workers' living conditions, and the impact on the environment. One major problem is that despite many serious work-related injuries, the nearest full service hospital is 50 kilometres away in Bhavnagar.