Malaysia urges Indonesia to keep a lid on haze
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia's sports minister has urged Indonesia to ensure that haze from raging forest fires does not affect the Southeast Asian Games this month, a report said Wednesday.
Malaysia will host the major multi-sport event from August 1930, with thousands of athletes from across the region descending on the capital Kuala Lumpur to take part.
However there have been fears that choking smog from the fires in neighbouring Indonesia could float over Malaysia during the games.
The haze is an annual problem caused by slash-and-burn fires started to clear land for palm oil and pulp and paper plantations. It often blows over Malaysia and Singapore, causing flight cancellations, school closures and soaring rates of respiratory illness.
Malaysian Sports Minister Khairy Jamaluddin played down fears that the games would be affected by haze, saying he did not believe there was currently a threat and Indonesia had improved efforts to tackle the problem.
But he said Jakarta still needed to take precautions.
"I hope Indonesia will be able to control this problem so it does not affect (the games)," he was quoted as saying in the New Straits Times newspaper.
"I believe they will be embarrassed if it does affect the SEA Games as they, too, are competing here."
The blazes normally peak in September and October.
But there has already been an early spike on Indonesia's western island of Sumatra -- one of the main areas hit by blazes each year -- with dozens of people treated for lung infections and some schools closed in Aceh province last month.