The Phnom Penh Post

A new lease on life for Jakarta’s formerly filthy rivers

- Jakarta, Indonesia

A GROUP of children gathered upon the banks of the Ciliwung River in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta, staring into the water and casting nets to try to catch fish.

Such a scene would have been unthinkabl­e several years ago on the major river, which used to be heavily polluted with stinking rubbish that blanketed the water’s surface.

The waterways that crisscross the teeming, overcrowde­d city of 10 million inhabitant­s are getting a new lease on life after the local government began a program to dredge and widen them in 2014.

“Much has been achieved, our rivers used to be very filthy,” Isnawa Adji, head of the Jakarta environmen­t agency, told AFP.

The rivers have been a central part of life for many in Jakarta for years, particular­ly those living in the poor slum areas that have grown up alongside them.

It is common to see adults and children swimming in the filthy water to escape Indonesia’s searing, tropical heat, and small, wooden boats navigating the waterways.

As well as ridding Jakarta’s 14 rivers of rubbish, authoritie­s have pushed a program of evictions to clear housing alongside the waterways, allowing them to be widened.

This is aimed at easing the floods that inundate Jakarta every year during the monthslong rainy season but has also proved controvers­ial, with activists accusing the government of tearing communitie­s apart by forcing families from their homes.

Most of the main rivers have now been cleared of rubbish, said Adji, and the agency is now focusing on cleaning up more than 1,000 smaller waterways.

The narrow ducts typically run through slums, and residents have been dumping trash in the waterways for decades due to the lack of a decent rubbish disposal system in most of the poor areas.

Activists praised the government’s efforts, saying the livelihood­s of those in riverside communitie­s had improved but urged authoritie­s to do more to stop people illegally dumping rubbish.

“We need to strictly enforce the law against people who throw their waste in the rivers,” said Abdul Kodir, founder of group “The Ciliwung lovers’ community”.

 ?? ADEK BERRY/AFP ?? Workers remove garbage from the Ciliwung river in Jakarta on November 29. The Jakarta city administra­tion has hired workers to clean up the city’s rivers, canals and lakes.
ADEK BERRY/AFP Workers remove garbage from the Ciliwung river in Jakarta on November 29. The Jakarta city administra­tion has hired workers to clean up the city’s rivers, canals and lakes.
 ?? PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP ?? A bumblebee gathers pollen from a pink hollyhock in Godewaersv­elde, northern France, on July 31, 2015. One species of bumblebee has now been put on the endangered species list in the US.
PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP A bumblebee gathers pollen from a pink hollyhock in Godewaersv­elde, northern France, on July 31, 2015. One species of bumblebee has now been put on the endangered species list in the US.
 ?? GOH CHAI HIN/AFP ?? A group of Indonesian children try to catch fish on the banks of one of the tributarie­s of the Ciliwung River in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta.
GOH CHAI HIN/AFP A group of Indonesian children try to catch fish on the banks of one of the tributarie­s of the Ciliwung River in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta.

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