The Star Malaysia

Paper trail

Hong Kong’s elderly cardboard collectors sent packing.

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Her fingers are bent from 20 years of collecting cardboard from Hong Kong’s streets, but Au Fung-lan has no desire to give up the gruelling work.

At 67, she is one of around 2,900 collectors – mainly women over the age of 60 – whose frail figures are a familiar sight, guiding trolleys loaded with cardboard through a city clogged with traffic and people.

They pick up discarded packing boxes from shops, markets and residentia­l buildings, selling them for a few dollars to recycling depots, where cardboard is more valuable than plastic.

The depots then ship it abroad – up to 95% of it to mainland China in 2016, according to local authoritie­s – as Hong Kong has no recycling plants of its own to convert it into usable materials.

But as China closes the door to imported rubbish, even from semiautono­mous regions such as Hong Kong, Au’s livelihood is under threat.

Beijing no longer wants the country to be a global trash can and has already started phasing out taking solid waste – a process it expects to complete by 2020.

Pragmatic Au says she tries not to think too much about her work drying up. She puts in 14-hour days so that she can afford a carer for herself and her 77-year-old husband, also a cardboard collector, when they finally decide to give up work.

“Some people think our work is arduous and look down on us. They say: ‘ You are so old, go home and enjoy life. Why collect cardboard?’ But if I can still work, I don’t want to rely on others,” she said.

Au turned to cardboard collecting after being laid off as a factory worker and courier. She has three grown-up children with jobs but does not want to depend on them for help.

By working from pre-dawn until dusk, she earns up to HK$300 (RM156) daily, selling 300kg of cardboard at HK$1 (RM0.52) per kilo.

It is a phenomenal work rate and much higher than the average collector who makes around HK$47.30 (RM24.65) a day, according to concern group Waste Pickers Platform (WPP).

Au attributes her bent fingers to years of tearing cardboard with her hands to flatten it.

She has been hit by a car twice, injuring her shoulders and feet as she pushes her trolley along a busy road to the local depot in the residentia­l neighbourh­ood of Kwai Fong.

Her trolley and cardboard have also been confiscate­d several times by government hygiene inspectors.

But she enjoys what she calls the freedom of working for herself, adding: “I’m not afraid. I do it every day.”

As unofficial freelance workers, collectors like Au have no legal recognitio­n or employment rights.

China’s imminent waste ban could wipe out this informal economy, which NGO workers say is key to some of the city’s elderly.

Around 80% of the collectors are over 60, with the oldest in their 90s. Eighty percent are also women and around a third work at least an eight-hour day, according to WPP.

Many are doing it to supplement their pensions and savings in a city where the wealth gap is growing – the cost of living in Hong Kong ranked fourth highest in the world in 2018, according to the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit.

WPP estimates that at least 193 tonnes of waste paper is delivered to recycling depots by the elderly collectors each day.

Jacky Lau, director of a local business associatio­n for the waste and recycling industry, said the China ban could not only wipe out work for collectors like Au, but would be devastatin­g for the cities’ depots too.

If those businesses were forced to close, there could be a “waste paper crisis” in Hong Kong as rubbish piles up, eventually ending up in landfill sites, he said. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Strenuous work: Au tying down her trolley full of cardboard before making her way to a recycling depot in the Kwai Fong district of Hong Kong. — AFP
Strenuous work: Au tying down her trolley full of cardboard before making her way to a recycling depot in the Kwai Fong district of Hong Kong. — AFP

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