At least 40 dolphins were killed near the spill of Japanese oil


At least 40 dolphins have been found dead near Mauritius, an island in East Africa, after oil spilled from a Japanese ship and polluted the water.

A Reuters report on Friday said environmentalists have been calling for an investigation into a Japanese ship that has been leaking oil into the sea since July.

The ship was wrecked on Monday.

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“There was a mother and her child,” Yasfar Hinaye, a fisherman, told Reuters. “He was very tired, he was not swimming well. But mom stayed with her, she didn’t let her baby go with the group. All the way, she stayed with him. She was trying to protect him. ”

Fishermen in the area expect that marine life will increase the number of deaths after making different efforts and trying to differentiate from animal pollution.

Hannibal described how he saw 25-30 dolphins floating in the lagoon, apparently dead from the polluted water. Struggling infant dolphins he filmed until he burned in front of them.

According to the report, after the baby’s death, the henna found the mother dolphin and asked another boat to find another one, as her own boat had less fuel.

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“But after a while she went to her side, a pin in the water, and a pin out of the water, and then she started to flutter her tail really, really fast,” Reuben Pel told the release.

Pillay is a professional drone operator and environmentalist who filmed the events.

The mother dolphin did not swim like other dead dolphins, but instead drowned – suggesting that more marine life could die from the oil spill.

The ops topsies of another 25 dolphins washed ashore earlier this week should be released in the coming days, Mauritius Fisheries Ministry’s Jaswin Sock Apaddu told Reuters.

The oil spill is believed to have been the result of the Japanese ship MV Vakashiyo hitting a coral reef in July.

Environmental activist group Greenpeace submitted a letter to Japanese company Mitsui OSK Lines seeking to know why it was approaching a coral reef.

Greenpeace focused not only on the damage to marine life, but also on the livelihoods of the people who live there.

Mitsui OSK Lines responded, promising to “open dialogue” to address the damage to the ship.

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“It’s time to use your influence to reduce damage to the planet and people at risk. This is an opportunity to transform your business portfolio and make renewable energy the core of your business, “Greenpeace said in a letter to the company on Thursday.

“As long as we continue to use oil, spill and such accidents.”