ABU DHABI Campaigners trying to prevent people from dumping rubbish in the desert say their message – that one in two camels is dying from eating waste – is going largely unheard.
Cameron Oliver, 12, started a campaign to save camels and other animals in the UAE as part of a school project, and has since seen his message go worldwide, appearing on television in Brazil, China, the UK and his native South Africa.
However, he and his family believe the facts are not being driven home hard enough, as there is little emphasis on recycling and many people litter without a second thought.Dr Ulrich Wernery, the scientific director at the Central Veterinary Research Laboratory (CVRL) in Dubai, where every second camel brought in for necropsy has ingested plastic and dies from related complications, agrees.
"There are 250,000 camels in the UAE and many are regularly ingesting waste,” he saidThe doctor, who first started warning the public that camels and other animals were dying from eating plastic 10 years ago, believes people are continuing to ignore his message and he is so frustrated at the inaction that he has almost given up.
“I watch people everywhere and there has been no change; they still throw rubbish away,” he said.
Cameron, who attends Al Rahah International School in the capital, said he was shocked when he learnt that the dumping of waste was causing animals to die agonising deaths.
As part of a school project, he developed a website – www.cameronscamelcampaign.com – to stop people from dumping rubbish.
“I can’t believe people are killing these animals,” said Cameron. “The camel is part of the UAE. It is what got people around. But it is not just about the camel. Goats are dying and turtles in the sea.”
His father, Mark Oliver, who works in retail, said: “It is a sensitive issue. People throw rubbish away as if they expect someone to come and pick it up after them. There is a cultural change that needs to happen. If they don’t stop they will kill all the camels.”
Sandra Knuteson, a Sharjah-based scientist, estimates that between 260kg and 840kg of rubbish per square kilometre is left behind at recreation sites, such as wadis in Fujairah and Hatta, each week.
Four-wheel-drive clubs, which regularly head into the desert for clean-up weekends, come back with dozens of bin bags filled with rubbish, which they later burn at landfill sites.
But even when refuse is properly thrown away, it often ends up at dumps and landfill sites that have no barriers to prevent animals from entering them.
“It is important to remember that this is not about Cameron,” said his father. “It’s about the camels.”
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