The Citizen (Gauteng)

Interpol, NGOs to oust abusers

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– Japan said yesterday it was facing a growing sea of plastic waste with limited capacity to process it after China stopped accepting foreign waste imports.

The environmen­t ministry said about a quarter of major regional and municipal government­s surveyed reported seeing accumulati­ng plastic waste, sometimes going beyond sanitary standards.

The costs of processing waste plastic were rising, according to more than 100 local government­s and 175 waste processing firms.

The world’s developing nations are also scrambling for ways to process plastic refuse after China stopped accepting it.

Nearly three-quarters of all plastic waste produced globally since 1992 has ended up in China and Hong Kong, according to a study in the journal Science Advances.

But since January, China has closed its borders to most paper and plastic waste in line with a new environmen­tal policy pushed by Beijing. Before the ban, Japan exported about 1.5 million tons of plastic waste per year, most of it to China.

The Japanese ministry said it would expand domestic capacity to process plastic waste, while also preventing illegal dumping.

The government also intends to boost efforts to encourage recycling, the survey added. – AFP

– Time is up for sexual predators in the aid sector, Britain’s developmen­t minister said yesterday, as she announced new measures to clamp down on sexual abuse and exploitati­on after a series of scandals.

Penny Mordaunt said it was a “pivotal moment” for the aid industry ahead of an internatio­nal summit on the issue, where the British government will announce a joint initiative with Interpol to stop sexual predators from getting jobs. – Reuters

London

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