GINTA: Accountability — what’s it worth these days?
HERE WE ARE AGAIN: like some relentless zombie, the story of the forgotten trash that belongs to Canada but is currently ‘vacationing’ in the Philippines has returned to haunt us, much to our shame. This time it comes with a threat, in the shape of a clear-as-daylight message from the Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte: ‘We will declare war against them.’ (Canada, that is.)
The said trash is not a negligible amount, but more than 100 full containers, unethically labeled ‘recyclable plastic.’ The company that sent it over to a port near Manila back in 2013 and 2014 is apparently defunct, but the consequences of their ill-thought plan are affecting two countries. How is that possible to have a company go defunct and thus become unaccountable when so much is at stake?
That companies get created and then dissolved for whatever reason is true. Insolvency is one reason. Still, when the bill is a hefty one not just financially, but politically — at country level no less — you’d expect the people who did the deed to be held responsible. One could argue, and correctly I’d say, it was a long enough string of eyes that saw that transport sent away.