only last Saturday,
we made a post about Monte Neme and how tourists are flocking to this most dangerous of places, and now this week I have just read about this beauty that kills, it looks so nice and harmless, but exposure to it can cause deadly diseases like mesotelioma (a rare form of which
affects the thin membrane that lines the chest and abdomen), asbestosis and
lung cancer, symptoms can occur decades after the exposure to it, blue asbestos kills, yet “It’s open
field for anyone to go there,” Lyniece Bolitho, a former resident of Wittenoom,
told ABC.net.au. “If you go there any day of the week, you will
see tourist after tourist after tourist going into Wittenoom — babies, people
from all over the world. This is a tourist hotspot we’re talking about here.”
photograph Five Years/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0), in its
heyday, between 1930 and 1966, Wittenoom was home to around 20,000 people, most
of whom worked in the now abandoned nearby mines, extracting deadly asbestos
every day. Today, it’s a ghost town surrounded by large ‘Danger’ signs designed
to keep people as far away as possible. Even though asbestos mining ceased
decades ago, Wittenoom is still surrounded by around three million tonnes of
asbestos residue, enough to make the air there potentially deadly. The place is
so dangerous that last year the Australian government decided to compulsorily
acquire the properties of the last three people living in the area, just to get
them to safety. And yet, there are thousands of tourists visiting Wittenoom
every year and proudly posting photos of it on social media, to put the danger into perspective, it’s
considered the most contaminated site in the southern hemisphere and one of the
most toxic in the world, but for some reason tourists just can’t stay away from
the abandoned mining town of Wittenoom, deep in Western Australia’s remote
Pilbara region,
photograph amandah1ia “These
warnings signs are not there for decoration or to add your Instagram
collection. They are serious warnings about serious health consequences,” Ben
Wyatt, Australia’s Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and Lands, recently said. “I can’t stress enough that it is
particularly foolish to travel to Wittenoom. There are plenty of gorges in
Western Australia which do not bring with them the threat of a fatal
consequences.” there are those who would like to see the government undertake a
cleanup operation in Wittenoom, to get rid of all the asbestos residue, but Ben
Wyatt says that even if billions were invested into such a project, “it is
virtually impossible that the area will ever be safe for human habitation”. So
it’s best to just stay away and forget that the place exists, “I have a simple
message for anyone thinking of travelling to Wittenoom. Don’t,” Wyatt warned,
if you are thinking of visiting two things, firstly experts
warn that even a short visit can have deadly consequences. Exposure to a single
fibre of asbestos residue can be fatal, and authorities have done everything in
their power to keep people away from the remote settlement, Wittenoom has been
taken off maps and road signs, disconnected from the power grid, and warning
signs have been placed all around it, secondly watch the slightly disturbing video above, crikey before you know it the people that indulge in “extreme tourism” will be planning
tours to Chernobyl! no wait a second, they already do!
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