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Home / The Country

MP vomits as he slams Nationals for mass fish death

news.com.au
10 Jan, 2019 07:21 PM4 mins to read

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Jeremy Buckingham runs off camera as he retches from the stench of the dead fish. Photo / Twitter

Jeremy Buckingham runs off camera as he retches from the stench of the dead fish. Photo / Twitter

The stench of dead fish was too much for NSW MP Jeremy Buckingham who threw up while slamming the Nationals for a mass fish death in the Darling River system.

Footage posted on Twitter shows former Greens MP Mr Buckingham, who will contest the next election as an independent, holding a dead fish and accompanied by two farmers.

He addresses the camera saying: "This is what you get when you leave the National Party in charge of water in Australia — dead fish; a massive stink."

But he is suddenly overcome by nausea and apologises before he starts retching and walks off to vomit off-camera.

In a tweet, Mr Buckingham said he was "involuntarily retching from the smell".

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"It was one of the most disgusting experiences of my life. I felt so sick that I panicked and jumped in the river to escape it — as bad as it is!"

Up to a million fish have died in the Darling River system in western NSW. it appears the smell was too much for one MP. Photo / Twitter
Up to a million fish have died in the Darling River system in western NSW. it appears the smell was too much for one MP. Photo / Twitter
Jeremy Buckingham runs off camera as he retches from the stench of the dead fish. Photo / Twitter
Jeremy Buckingham runs off camera as he retches from the stench of the dead fish. Photo / Twitter

The discovery of up to a million dead fish has been blamed on mismanagement and corruption, but the NSW Government insists the drought is partly to blame.

NSW Primary Industries Minister Niall Blair admits the mass fish death in the Darling River system at Menindee is devastating, and on Wednesday he asked for an urgent report from the Department of Primary Industries and WaterNSW.

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The minister has been savaged by some locals who claim water levels are low because of the amounts diverted to irrigators.

But Mr Blair insists no one is getting water because of the prolonged drought.

"In the past six months there's been 30 gigalitres in the system — on an average year there is 4000 gigalitres," he told AAP on Wednesday.

"You cannot dismiss the fact there is a drought and a lack of water."

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Water has been released from the Menindee Lakes to South Australia under the Murray-Darling Basin Authority's approval and because of the drought there's been nothing to replenish the system, Mr Blair says.

The NSW Government is in talks with the Commonwealth about operating rules and water-sharing arrangements, he added.

The minister on Wednesday inspected the river and was confronted by more than 100 angry residents demanding answers.

Rob McBride, a grazier who lives south of Menindee on the Lower Darling, insists the deaths are the result of a "man-made engineered disaster".

"It has everything to do with the total mismanagement and corruption of the water system," Mr McBride told AAP on Wednesday.

"They (irrigators) are using our water from a fragile ecosystem," he said.

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The Menindee Lakes, which are about four times the size of Sydney Harbour, were drained twice in four years and are sitting at between 2.6 per cent and 4 per cent capacity, he said.

Mr McBride features in a viral Facebook video where he's standing in the Darling River alongside Dick Arnold holding dead fish.

The duo blame state and federal governments for the "environmental disaster" affecting the golden perch, Murray cod and bony herring.

"You have to be bloody disgusted in yourselves," Mr Arnold said in the video posted on Tuesday.

Mr McBride's daughter, Kate, has said the deaths are due to the diversion of water from the river for irrigation and the draining of Menindee Lakes.

"These huge Murray cods are about 80 years old, they've survived the drought and extreme weather — but the one thing they can't survive is this draining," she told AAP on Wednesday.

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The Murray-Darling Basin Authority has described the deaths as a terrible reminder of the impact drought has on the environment.

The latest kill follows an incident in December resulting in more than 10,000 fish mortalities along a 40km stretch of the Darling River.

The DPI said ongoing dry conditions and a recent big temperature drop could have caused the deaths.

A South Australian royal commission was held in 2018 to investigate allegations of widespread water theft from the Murray-Darling Basin by rogue irrigators with its report expected on February 1.

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