A civil court in Nentas ruled on Tuesday that the French government bored the partial responsibility for the death of the 2016 gene-rane Afrey, which was a 50-year-old Jogar, who had to face a rapid pulmonary edema, which fills the lungs with a liquid, when he leaves a high concentration of hydrogen sulfide on a beach in western Britney.
In a statement, the court has “put the state for negligence for negligence, which fails to implement European and National Rules designed to protect water from agricultural pollution,” which “is the main bike to spread green algae in Brittany.”
“For the first time, a French court has recognized the link between the death of a person and the negligence of the state in the thesis green algae,” said Francois Laforeg, the family lawyer, Francois Laforeg.
The court gives the first verdict in finding the state label
The family sued the French government for his sudden death, losing its case in 2022, when the Presiding Decurred there that this is not enough evidence, which connects the algae on the Gosent’s mouth near the St.-Breek city.
On Tuesday, the Nentas Court ruled that the French state which is responsible for the death of 60% of Orade, but is not caught that he had risked the area and put it at risk.
The widow of Aufray is € 277.343 ($ 321,750), while each of their three children wants € 15,000, and their brothers for € 9,000.
Britney, nation’s pig farm
Brittany is a verified agricultural power plant within France and is responsible for producing the country’s dairy (one-third), poultry (one-aid) and pork (one-third).
France has made an investment in the region for decades, but the intensity and excessive use of nitrate fertilizers has been inspired to jointly bloom largely with a drainage from the pig fields that the coastal consists of the peninsula every year.
The deadly concentration of sulfides released from rotting goods regularly closes the beaches in the region and the cost of French taxpayers is as millions because every summer has a tonne truck of algae.
The top auditor of France stated in 2021 that an estimated 90% of Britney algae can be traced back to farmers who have greatly increased their use of nitrogen fertilizers in the 1960s.
Edited by: saim dusan inayatullah