World's poor overwhelmed by rubbish
guardian.co.uk, 5 June 2009
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World Environment Day was established by the UN in 1972 to give a human face to environmental issues. But as these images show, developing countries suffer the worst effects of waste and pollution. Here, a trash-covered creek in Manila, Philippines, where slums often adjoin rubbish dumps. The country's poorest sift through the garbage to find discarded objects they can sell on or re-use, or even scraps of food to eat. Photograph: Francis R. Malasig/EPA
A Palestinian woman tries to walk along a road in Gaza so full of rubbish and sewage that even vehicles can no longer drive on it. Photograph: Sipa Press /Rex Features
A girl stands on the rubbish-strewn beach in Haina in the Dominican Republic. The New York-based non-profit Blacksmith Institute is sending researchers to 80 developing countries to find and assess many of the world's dirtiest industrial waste sites. The institute recently led a clean up of a battery site in Haina, in which much of the underlying soil was 35% lead, a pollutant that leads to severe learning disabilities in children. Photograph: Eduardo Munoz/Reuters
A woman carrying a baby discards waste water in the suburban area of Yoff outside Dakar, Senegal. According to Senegalese law it is illegal to dispose of garbage and waste water in public places. However, waste disposal facilities are inadequate, forcing many communities to dispose of their waste on public ground and in streams. The World Health Organisation estimates that most deaths and pathological complaints in developing countries are associated with a water-borne illnesses. Photograph: Nic Bothma/EPA
An employee works inside the Caivano dump, near Naples, southern Italy, where rubbish is turned into bales. Neapolitans took the law into their own hands after the city ran out of space to dump rubbish. Photograph: Salvatore Laporta/AP
Computer parts lie on the ground at a dump in Accra, Ghana. Thousands of discarded computers from western Europe and the US arrive in the ports of west Africa every day, ending up in massive toxic dumps where children burn and pull them apart to extract metals for cash. Photograph: Jane Hahn/EPA
A cow feeds on plastic bags and other garbage along a stream in New Delhi, India. Photograph: DAVID GUTTENFELDER/AP
A child swims in the polluted waters in Cilincing, one of the poorest communities of Jakarta in Indonesia which has very poor access to clean drinking water. Photograph: BEAWIHARTA/Reuters
A farmer collects produce grown close to a stream containing dozens of discarded cartons and other waste items in Xinlou village, north-east of Guangzhou, Guangdong province, China. Pollution has become the ugly face of China's rapid economic growth. As many as 300 million people drink contaminated water every day, and 190 million are suffering from water-related illnesses each year. Photograph: Alex Hofford/EPA
A huge mound of waste at a dump in New Orleans, a year after Hurricane Katrina struck. Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP
Farm waste and used pesticide containers pile up in a natural water reserve, which has become an illegal dump,according to environmental group Ecologistas en Accion, in El Ejido, south-east Spain. Photograph: Francisco Bonilla/Reuters
Birds on a tree among plastic materials in Changzhi, Shanxi province. Photograph: Stringer Shanghai/REUTERS
Men push goods past a pile of uncollected garbage in the Kibera slum in Nairobi, Kenya: Kibera, which houses almost 1 million people, is the largest slum in Africa, and one of the biggest in the world. It has only two main water pipes, and in most of the slums there is no sanitation, with one hole-in-the ground latrine being shared by up to 50 shacks. Photograph: KAREL PRINSLOO/AP
Sheep feed off rubbish left on one of Albania's biggest beach resorts of Durres. Photograph: Gent Shkullaku/AFP
A man removes garbage brought in by the rain in an open canal at the slum of Cite-Soleil in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Photograph: ARIANA CUBILLOS/AP
In this photo released by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, marine debris has been washed ashore on Laysan Island in the Hawaiian Islands. Photograph: NOAA/AP
Carrier bags from the British supermarket chain Tesco contribute to pollution in the Shunde district of Guangdong, China. Italian, Dutch and British waste is recycled in the area, but as many as 3bn plastic bags are used in China every day. Photograph: Richard Jones/Sinopix/Rex Features
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2009
2 comments:
Each individual is responsible for the proper disposal of their waste. People must keep in mind that when trashes are not properly managed it would for sure create havoc to the health of the people around.
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