Eastern Eye (UK)

As Covid toll rises, demand goes up for cardboard coffins

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AT A factory in Sri Lanka’s Dehiwala-Mount Lavinia city, workers use staples and glue to assemble long cardboard boxes, which will be used as coffins for some of the country’s coronaviru­s victims.

The coffin is made out of recycled paper and costs a sixth of the cheapest wooden casket, according to 51-year old Priyantha Sahabandu, the government official who first came up with the idea.

As Sri Lanka’s death toll from Covid-19 surges, some are opting for these cardboard coffins when they cremate their loved ones. The country recorded its highest daily death toll of 198 on August 20, with total fatalities reaching 7,560.

Currently, about 400 people die per day on average in Sri Lanka of various causes, including Covid-19, said Sahabandu, a member of the municipal council for Dehiwala-Mount Lavinia, a city in Colombo district.

“To make 400 coffins you have to cut some 250 to 300 trees. To prevent that environmen­tal destructio­n I proposed this concept to the health committee of the council,” he said.

“With the spread of the coronaviru­s, people found it difficult to pay for expensive wooden coffins,” he said.

Each coffin costs around Sri Lankan rupees 4,500 (£16.42), compared with 30,000 rupees (£109.5) for a cheap wooden coffin, Sahabandu said. It can hold up to 100 kilograms.

The coffins were initially used mostly for Covid-19 victims, but have become more popular among those concerned about the environmen­t. Some 350 cardboard coffins have been delivered since early 2020, and the factory is working on another 150 ordered by the council.

“The majority of the people in the country is supporting this. The issue today is supplying it. We are working on that,” Sahabandu said.

 ??  ?? AFFORDABLE: Coffins made out of recycled paper cost a sixth of the cheapest wooden casket
AFFORDABLE: Coffins made out of recycled paper cost a sixth of the cheapest wooden casket

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