The Star Malaysia

Tunisian anti-litter activist takes up 30-beach challenge

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NABEUL: Bin bags at the ready, “long-distance activist” Mohamed Oussama Houij moves methodical­ly along a beach in Tunisia’s Mediterran­ean town of Nabeul, scooping up all kinds of trash as he goes along.

The 27-year-old sanitary engineer set out in July to walk a 300km stretch of coastline in northern Tunisia and clean up 30 beaches along the way.

He hopes the two-month trek will help convince authoritie­s, holidaymak­ers and average Tunisians alike that the sea should not be used as a giant garbage tip.

With a sturdy pair of boots and a hat to shield him from the summer sun, Houij began his journey in the central coastal city of Mahdia and plans to finish in Solimane, 40km from the capital Tunis.

The trip will take him through crowded hotspots like Daar Chaabane in Nabeul, but also along secluded coves and shores.

“I believe in citizen mobilisati­on and I chose to act ... and to raise awareness about the problem of pollution on our beaches,” the activist said.

The Facebook page of his “300 Kilometres” campaign has more than 13,000 followers and is entire- ly independen­t, he boasted.

“No political party is welcome... 300 Kilometres is a free citizen initiative and will remain forever,” the activist wrote on the page.

But while Mohamed Oussama may be a dreamer, he is also realistic.

“The 300 Kilometres action is not really about cleaning... I know I’m just a drop of water in the ocean,” he said.

“I want to raise public awareness and get people thinking: ‘Wait, it’s not normal, all these bottles, these caps ... all these plastic bags’.”

Since Tunisia’s 2011 revolution, the proliferat­ion of waste has steadily worsened across the country – in big cities, rural areas and beaches.

One contributi­ng factor has been the absence of elected municipal councils.

Between the fall in 2011 of longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and local polls held in May this year, town halls were managed by “special delegation­s” that often neglected issues like littering and waste management.

There is also a lack of environmen­tal awareness among Tunisians, Environmen­t Minister Riadh Mouakher said in mid-2017 as he announced the launch of a special “green police” unit to combat the North African country’s rubbish woes.

At his first beach stop, Mohamed Oussama estimates that he collected about 100kg of waste. After that, he simply stopped weighing the bags.

Nearly 150km and 14 beaches later, he is astounded by the sheer volume of waste he has found along the shore.

“We’re talking tonnes of rubbish ... the more you clean, the more you find. It never ends,” he said.

From plastic bottles and soiled diapers to commercial refuse, he says he has seen “all forms of pollution” seeping into the sea.

“I’ve seen a wide array of pollution, from the personal pollution of people who come to the beach through to the industrial pollution” of local and public companies, he said.

“The authoritie­s do not take the problem of pollution in Tunisia seriously,” he added.

The environmen­tal activist is also frustrated with holidaymak­ers who treat him as a “zabel” (rubbish collector) and don’t hesitate to ask him to pick up their waste.

Travelling with nothing but a rucksack and a guitar, on lucky nights he is offered shelter and a bed. Most nights, though, he sleeps rough.

Reactions from those he meets along the way range “from one extreme to another”, he said.

“There are people who are very active, who encourage you and who help you clean up ... but others kill your desire to work for the cause.

“Each day brings trouble of its own, but the will is there ... there’s no reason for me to stop.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Man with a mission: Mohamed Oussama walking along the Nabeul beach in northern Tunisia.
— AFP Man with a mission: Mohamed Oussama walking along the Nabeul beach in northern Tunisia.

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