Hungarian police have arrested the head of the aluminum company responsible for the toxic waste spill that killed eight people after 184 million gallons of sludge burst from its reservoir a week ago, CNN reports.
Authorities said they were charging the managing director of the company, Zoltan Bakonyi, with public endangerment and harming the environment.
“We have well-founded reasons to believe that there were people who knew about the dangerous weakening of the reservoir wall, but for personal reasons they thought it wasn’t worth repairing and hoped there’d be no trouble,” said Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, in a speech to his nation’s parliament Monday.
Orban said his administration was freezing the assets of the company, MAL Zrt, to make sure compensation funds would be available. He also said his administration was moving to take over the company and to restart production.
The body of the spill’s eighth victim, and the final person reported missing, was found Monday afternoon. The Associated Press reports that another 50 people remained hospitalized.
The toxic red mud from the Oct. 4 spill flooded three villages in less than an hour, and reached the Danube River by Thursday. It raised fears that the environmental impact might extend to other parts of Hungary and countries downstream, including Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Romania and the Ukraine. Water tests released Friday, however, showed the acidity level in the river by that point was not high enough to pose a threat.
Construction has begun on a new containment wall to protect areas so far not affected by the spill in the town of Kolontar — from which more than 700 residents have been evacuated — and other communities.
Authorities fear that if the cracks on the broken reservoir’s wall continue to widen and the wall falls, as is expected, a second reservoir next to it could also break, releasing another toxic flood. Soldiers are standing by to evacuate more residents if necessary.
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Toxic Deluge Inundates Hungarian Town, Threatens Parts of Europe



184 million gallons of toxic sludge? There must be some way to contain such substances so disasters like this won’t occur. If anything, separate the waste into multiple containers so if one fails, not all are affected.