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  • 2
    Apr
    2013
    9:24am, EDT

    River turns white from pollution in China

    Reuters

    A polluted stream which has turned white in Dongchuan district of Kunming, Yunnan province, March 20. According to local media, the source of the pollution is waste water discharged by nearby mining industries.

    Reuters

    Farmers dig ditches from a white polluted stream to farm fields for irrigation in Dongchuan district of Kunming, Yunnan province, March 21.

    Reuters

    A villager carries buckets of water to be used for drinking from a white polluted stream in Dongchuan district of Kunming, Yunnan province, March 20.

    Reuters

    A villager holds two bottles of water, one from the polluted stream, left, and the other normal mineral water, in Dongchuan district of Kunming, Yunnan province, March 21.

    Locals began calling the river, 'milk river' after runoff from a nearby mine turned the water white. It is their only source of drinking water and farmers use it to irrigate their fields.

    Pollution problems are growing in China. Smog in Beijing, captured in pictures and heavily reported, caught the world’s attention. Outdoor air pollution is now the fourth leading risk factor for deaths in the country, according to a report in The New York Times. But polluted water is another problem. In March, thousands of dead pigs were found floating in a Shanghai river, the main source of water for the city’s residents. Tainted waterways have been linked to higher cancer rates in people living nearby. Rivers filled with algae, garbage or turned unnatural colors by factory runoff and chemical spills are still being used by farmers, fisherman and for drinking water. 

    An official newspaper reported that China will spend 100 billion yuan ($16 billion dollars) over three years to deal with Beijing’s pollution. But will they address the water issue? 

    • More photos of China's water pollution on Business Insider
    • More photos from China on PhotoBlog

    Editor's note: The pictures were taken on March 20-21, but made available to NBC News today.

    19 comments

    For all you "free marketers" out there that want to do away with the EPA, this is what you can look forward to. I understand that we need the jobs and the fuel (gas and oil) so we will probably build Keystone XL and continue "fracking' but both are a major ecological disasters waiting to happen. I w …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, farm, water, pollution, environment, drinking-water, world-news, irrigation
  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    10:43am, EST

    Reptile roundup: Thousands of crocodiles captured after escape from South Africa farm

    A crocodile farm in South Africa is forced to open flood gates and release the reptiles into rising waters. At least 2,000 crocodiles have been recaptured. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Peroshni Govender, Jon Herskovitz and Nelson Banya, Reuters

    JOHANNESBURG - South Africa has called out the police to join the hunt for as many as 10,000 crocodiles on the loose after escaping from a farm during floods and being washed into one of southern Africa's biggest rivers, officials said Friday.

    Crocodile farmers, locals and police have trapped thousands of the reptiles, using plastic bands to tie their legs behind their backs and then piling them into pickup trucks.


    The flood gates at the Rakwena Crocodile Farm, near to the Botswana and Zimbabwe borders, were opened on Sunday because it was feared that rising flood waters would crush the reptiles, releasing some 15,000 crocodiles into the Limpopo River.

    "At night time we have more success. It is much easier to see them," Zane Langman, whose in-laws own the farm, told news channel ENCA.

    Fashion industry
    Most of the crocodiles are less than 6 feet 6 inches long. The area is home to several farms that supply crocodile skins to the fashion industry.

    "We are working as a team with the stakeholders," police spokesman Brigadier Hangwani Mulaudzi said Friday.

    There have been no reports of injuries caused by the escaped reptiles.

    Police in Zimbabwe, on the other side of the Limpopo, also issued warnings to people to avoid going into the water because of the crocodile threat.

    Heavy rains and flooding have claimed at least 20 lives in Mozambique and South Africa and led to the evacuations of thousands.

    Related:

    15,000 crocodiles escape from South Africa farm

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    14 comments

    Dad used to hunt them by having me wear my "chicken wing necklace" and "rabbit gut hip waders". Just hop in the water and wait!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: farm, river, south-africa, escaped, skins, featured, crocodiles, limpopo
  • 24
    Jan
    2013
    3:37pm, EST

    15,000 crocodiles escape from South Africa farm

    Cameron Spencer/Getty Images file

    A crocodile drifts past a hippopotamus in the Limpopo River at the Pafuri game reserve in South Africa in July 2010.

    By Peroshni Govender, Reuters

    JOHANNESBURG -- Some 15,000 crocodiles escaped from a South African reptile farm during a flood this week and about half of them are still on the loose in and around one of southern Africa's biggest rivers, a newspaper reported on Thursday.

    "There used to be only a few crocodiles in the Limpopo River. Now there are a lot," Zane Langman, whose in-laws own the farm in the northern part of the country told Beeld newspaper.


    Langman said only half the escaped crocodiles from the Rakwena Crocodile Farm close to the Botswana border had been recaptured, the report said.

    Langman added that farm gates were opened out of fear the rushing flood water would crush the crocodiles.

    Officials from the farm were not immediately available for comment.

    One crocodile apparently from the farm was captured about 75 miles away at a school rugby field, it said.

    The heavy rains and flooding have claimed at least 20 lives in Mozambique and South Africa and led to the evacuations of thousands of people.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    33 comments

    Because in their habitats, they are the apex predator. They are better at maintaining natural balance than humans are. I just wish we could find a way to expand their territory for them, say Iran and North Korea maybe?

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    Explore related topics: farm, flood, south-africa, featured, crocodiles, reptile
  • 15
    Oct
    2012
    10:59pm, EDT

    Wal-mart seeks big suppliers in India, where most farms are small

    All photos by Vivek Prakash / Reuters

    Labourers sort through and grade harvested tomatoes on a farm that supplies fresh produce to Wal-Mart in Narayangaon, about 112 miles west of Mumbai.

    Labourers harvest tomatoes on a farm that supplies fresh produce to Wal-Mart in Narayangaon.

    Two-wheelers move past the newly opened Bharti Wal-Mart Best Price Modern wholesale store in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad.

    Workers walk inside an aisle of the newly opened Bharti Wal-Mart Best Price Modern wholesale store.

    Reuters reports that India requires Wal-mart to source 30 percent of its goods from local, small industries, and therefore plans to sign up 35,000 farmers in the next three years:

    Wal-Mart must buy in small batches from small plot-holders in a country where more than 80 percent of farms are under 2 hectares. That means contracting with thousands of farmers will still yield only a few thousand metric tons. In North America, retailers like Wal-Mart can buy from a few hundred farmers who provide hundreds of thousands of metric tons of produce between them.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    3 comments

    If our government required every company selling at retail in the US to have 35% of its product grown or produced in the US, Walmart would go out of business. Walmart is the biggest exporter in existence for the government of China. Walmart paid for China's first aircraft carrier and has made a dow …

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    Explore related topics: business, farm, india, food, wal-mart, agriculture, world-news
  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    10:11am, EST

    Deadliest crash in years kills 11 in Canada

    By msnbc.com and news services

    HAMPSTEAD, Ontario -- Ten migrant farm workers from Peru were killed when a flat bed hit a passenger van in rural Canada on Monday afternoon, police and the workers' employer said. The truck driver also was killed.

    Three other passengers were critically injured, The Globe and Mail reported.


    The crash, the deadliest in Ontario since 1999,  will leave at least 10 families in another country without a breadwinner, according to the Globe and Mail.

    20 years for driver in DUI crash that killed nun

    Police said one survivor was airlifted to a hospital with life-threatening injuries, and two others were seriously injured.

    "On behalf of 13 million Ontarians, I want to offer our deepest condolences to those who lost a loved one and to offer our most sincere prayers for those taken to hospital," Premier Dalton McGuinty said in a statement.

    No names of the victims have been released. Albert Burgers, who owns the farm where the workers were Monday before the crash, said some had been with his crew for more than 10 years.

    Police told the CEO of the truck company, Speedy Transport, that the van apparently went through a stop sign and was hit by the truck.

    911 calls released after horrific Fla. pileup

    The impact sent the van hurtling across a lawn before smashing into a house. The van's passenger side was nearly ripped off.

    "I've been on the job for 28 years and I’ve never seen anything like it," Inspector Steve Porter told the newspaper as he stood near the scene after dark.

    Msnbc.com staff and The Associated contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • US shutters embassy in Syria, withdraws all personnel
    • 'Death to Christians': Suspected Jewish extremists deface monastery
    • US levies new sanctions on Iran's Central Bank
    • Israel PM: Palestinian reconciliation deal abandons 'way of peace'
    • 3 dead, dozens missing after blast at Pakistan factory
    • US tour guide recounts kidnapping in Egypt
    • Anti-Putin protesters: Bitter cold and big questions

     

    21 comments

    Reading the article it says nothing about anybody not being able to "speak the language and read road signs". English-speaking Americans run stop signs and kill people everyday (drinking and driving, texting, etc.). Don't be so quick to judge.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, farm, peru, crash, car, workers, migrant, featured

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