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Rome (AFP) July 1, 2008 Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi vowed on Tuesday that Naples would be "liberated" of the rubbish jamming its streets by mid-July. "In two weeks, we will have definitively liberated the streets of the city of Naples from the rubbish," Berlusconi told a news conference in nearby Acerra, where one of four new incinerators is being built. Rubbish czar Guido Bertolaso, named by Berlusconi in May to handle the mafia-linked crisis, had earlier set a mid-August deadline. "We are headed towards a solution that will put the problem behind us," Berlusconi said. Acerra is the site for the first of four high-technology incinerators to be set up in Naples' impoverished Campania region, which has been dogged by a dysfunctional waste disposal system since 1994. Berlusconi said the Acerra incinerator would go into service next January and be "fully operational" by April 2009. In the meantime, Naples' rubbish will be sent to other parts of Italy for treatment, he said. Berlusconi, elected in April, promised to resolve the overall rubbish crisis in three years, and his conservative government has begun opening 10 new dumps under military guard in the region. A "waste disposal state of emergency" in the Naples area has been renewed annually since 1994. Existing dumps are filled to capacity in the region, which has no incinerators and recyclable waste regularly fails to be sorted. Two major investigations are under way into the alleged collusion of officials with local waste handling companies -- many infiltrated by the local Camorra mafia -- and suspected irregularities in the waste management system. Related Links Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up
![]() ![]() Prior to the federal Clean Air Act, unhindered industrial emissions were released into the air throughout the Midwestern and Eastern United States for decades. Many of those harmful chemicals came right back down to earth in the form of acid rain, a chemical concoction that includes nitric and sulfuric acid. |
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