New Straits Times

Bali’s ‘garbage emergency’

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KUTA: Bali’s palm-fringed Kuta beach has long been a favourite with tourists seeking sun and surf, but nowadays its golden shoreline is disappeari­ng under a mountain of garbage.

Plastic straws and food packaging are strewn between sunbathers, while surfers bobbing behind the waves dodge waste flushe d out from rivers or brought in by swirling currents.

“When I want to swim, it is not really nice. I see a lot of garbage here every day, every time,” Austrian traveller Vanessa Moonshine said.

“It’s always coming from the ocean. It’s really horrible.”

Often dubbed a paradise on earth, the Indonesian holiday island has become an embarrassi­ng poster child for the country’s trash problem.

The problem grew so bad that officials in Bali last month declared a “garbage emergency” across a 6km stretch of coast that included popular beaches Jimbaran, Kuta and Seminyak.

Officials deployed 700 cleaners and 35 trucks to remove roughly 100 tons of debris each day to a nearby landfill.

Bali’s rubbish problem is at its worst during the annual monsoon season, when strong winds push marine flotsam onto the beach and swollen rivers wash rubbish from riverbanks to the coast, according to Putu Eka Merthawan from the local environmen­t agency.

“This garbage does not come from people living in Kuta and nearby areas,” he said.

“It would be suicidal if Kuta people were doing it.” AFP

 ?? PIC
AFP ?? Rubbish collectors clearing trash on Kuta beach near Denpasar.
PIC AFP Rubbish collectors clearing trash on Kuta beach near Denpasar.

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