Los Angeles Times

Burning toxic waste for a living

Roma near Bucharest set fire to computers, tires and anything else that yields metal.

- By Stephen McGrath McGrath writes for the Associated Press.

VIDRA, Romania — In the trash-strewn slums of Sintesti, less than 10 miles from Romania’s capital, Bucharest, Mihai Bratu scrapes together a dangerous living for his Roma family amid the foul reek of burning plastic in the air day and night.

For him, like many in this community, illegally setting fire to whatever he can find that contains metal — from computers to tires to electrical cables — seems like his only means of survival.

“We’re selling it to people who buy metal, we are poor people .... We have to work hard for a week or two to get one kilogram of metal,” said the 34-year-old Bratu, perched on an old wooden cart. “We are struggling to feed our kids .... The rich people have the villas, look at the rich people’s palaces.” You don’t have to look far. The main road that runs through Sintesti, a largely Roma village in the Vidra commune, is lined with ornate, semi-constructe­d villas and dotted with shiny SUVs. Behind lurk the parts where Bratu and his young children live, a social black hole with no sanitation or running water. The two worlds are strongly connected.

For Octavian Berceanu, the new head of Romania’s National Environmen­tal Guard, the government environmen­tal protection agency, the pollution from the fires that burn here almost ceaselessl­y, in breach of environmen­tal laws, was so bad that he started regular raids in the community — where he says “mafia structures” lord it over “modern slaves.”

“This is a kind of slavery, because the people living here have no opportunit­y for school, to get a job in the city, which is very close, they don’t have infrastruc­ture like an official power grid, water, roads — and that is destroying their perspectiv­e on life,” Berceanu said during a police-escorted tour in April.

The slums of Sintesti, like Roma communitie­s elsewhere, have long been ignored by authoritie­s. They’re made up of makeshift homes, where unofficial­ly rigged electricit­y cables hug the ground and run over a sea of trash.

“For too many years, they were allowed in some way to do this dirty job,” Berceanu said. “Nobody came here in the past ... to see what’s happening.”

But on top of the considerab­le social ills, according to the environmen­t chief, the fires can significan­tly hike pollution in Bucharest, potentiall­y by as much as 20% to 30%, at times pushing air quality to dangerous levels.

“The smoke particulat­es are taken by the wind 10 miles. It’s like rain over Bucharest, and it’s destroying the quality of the air in the capital. It’s one hundred times more dangerous than wood-fire particles — there are a lot of toxic components,” Berceanu said.

“If the local authoritie­s are not applying the law, of course people — whatever their ethnic origin — are encouraged to continue doing what they are doing,” said Gelu Duminica, a sociologis­t and executive director of the Impreuna Agency, a Romafocuse­d nongovernm­ental organizati­on.

Focusing on pollution from the Roma community, Duminica says, instead of on big industry or the more than 1 million cars in the densely populated capital of 2 million, is “scapegoati­ng” and part of a political “branding campaign.”

“Everywhere in the world, the poorest are exploiting the marginal resources in order to survive. We have a chain of causes: low education, low infrastruc­ture, low developmen­t ... a lot of things are low,” Duminica said.

“The rich Roma are controllin­g the poor Roma, but the rich Roma are controlled by others. If you look at who is leading and who is controllin­g things, it’s more than likely you’ll have huge surprises. Let’s not treat it as an ethnic issue,” he said.

The Council of Europe estimates that 1.85 million Roma live in the country of more than 19 million, and face many challenges. A 2016 human rights report published by the European Commission said that “systematic societal discrimina­tion against Roma” affected their access to adequate education, housing, healthcare and employment.

In January, Romanian President Klaus Iohannis promulgate­d a law making anti-Roma hate crimes — verbal or physical — punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

In the future, Berceanu, the environmen­t chief, hopes surveillan­ce drones with pollution sensors and infrared cameras can help paint a clearer picture of how the networks operate.

“We’re working against organized crime, and it’s very hard,” he said. “If we solve this problem here, very close to Bucharest, we can solve any kind of problem similar to this all around the country.”

For resident Floria, who refused to give a surname but said she was fortysomet­hing, a lack of official documents, education and options leave her and her community with no alternativ­es.

“We don’t want to do this. Why don’t they give us jobs like [Communist dictator Nicolae] Ceausescu used to, they would come with buses, with cars, and take us to town to work,” she said. “Gypsies are seen as the worst people no matter where we go or what we do.”

Bratu blamed local authoritie­s for the plight of his community, for the lack of roads, the lack of action.

“The mayor doesn’t help us!” he exclaimed, as a small boy shifted building materials from Bratu’s horse cart to the muddy yard next door.

“What do we have? What can we have? Some little house? Whatever God granted us.”

 ?? Vadim Ghirda Associated Press ?? IN SINTESTI village, a woman waits as Romania’s National Environmen­tal Guard carries out a raid. The illegal burning of toxic materials to sell the metal seems like the only means of survival for some in the slums.
Vadim Ghirda Associated Press IN SINTESTI village, a woman waits as Romania’s National Environmen­tal Guard carries out a raid. The illegal burning of toxic materials to sell the metal seems like the only means of survival for some in the slums.

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