'I like plastic': Pakistan's toxic 'love affair' with waste

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Chitral: From the once pristine rivers of Hindu Kush to the slums of Islamabad, Pakistan is being smothered by plastic due to a lack of
public awareness, government inertia, and poor waste management.Plastic bags are a large part of the problem -- the nation uses some 55
billion of them each year, according to the Pakistan Plastic Manufacturers Association.Beaches deluged with plastic waste and dying marine
life entangled in bags have shocked other countries into action -- around 120 have implemented some form of single-use plastic ban
Pakistan is among them but struggles with enforcement
There is no cohesive national policy and regional efforts often fail to consider the importance of educational outreach -- with many in
rural areas claiming to be unaware of the damage single use plastic can wreak
"Fighting for the environment? We have no knowledge about that," says salesman Mohammad Tahir, who uses plastic bags to wrap vegetables for
his customers
The 42-year-old hails from the mountainous Chitral district, which first banned the use of such bags two years ago -- but to little effect
"I like plastic bags," shrugs resident Khairul Azam, while shopping at a local market
"Once home, I throw them away I know it is not good, but we don´t have waste bins in my neighbourhood," he adds
Instead such waste litters the roadsides and hillsides
It also clogs the streams that feed into the Indus River, which is now the second most plastic polluted river in the world, behind only the
Yangtze River in China, according to a study by the German Environmental Research Center Helmholtz
'Eating plastic'Plastics swamp the Arabian Sea coastline, where the sewers of the sprawling port city of Karachi spew its waste.According to
the United Nations, single-use plastic bags kill up to one million birds, hundreds of thousands of marine mammals and turtles, along with
"countless" fish each year
And yet in Pakistan, authorities say the amount of plastic used is increasing by 15 percent each year
Recycling options are limited and waste disposal is often woefully mismanaged -- even in the capital garbage is often simply burned in the
street."Plastic doesn´t degrade
It only becomes smaller and smaller," says Hassaan Sipra, an environmental researcher."Animals eat it
You eat them
Then it generates liver dysfunctions, diabetes, diarrhoea
But because it is cheap and convenient, people don´t see the health consequences," he adds
A new report by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) estimates that an average person ingests up to five grams of plastic a week -- roughly equal
to the weight of a credit card.Plastic bags have become part of the "culture" in Pakistan, says Nazifa Butt, a researcher with WWF
"We would never use a cup of tea without a saucer
You will never be sold anything without a plastic bag
It is considered insulting," she adds.In Chitral, authorities first tried to ban plastic bags in 2017, with an additional measure passed
earlier this year stating that only biodegradable bags -- also criticised for their environmental impact -- can be used in the
area.Authorities have also backed new environmental awareness campaigns in schools, according to a local official.But many shops still do
not use biodegradable bags and enforcement against single-use plastics remains minimal
"The local government is not sincere," said Shabir Ahmad, chairman of the Chitral traders union
He explains: "They never check the market
They don´t fine the shopkeepers."'Health menace´-"I can confiscate all the plastic bags in one hour
But then, what is the alternative?" says Khurshid Alam Mehsud, a district administrative officer in Chitral, who insists more "time" is
needed to address the issue.Provincial governments in Sindh and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa along with municipal authorities in Lahore have issued
similar bans
But little has changed on the ground due to lack of law enforcement.However, Prime Minister Imran Khan´s government -- which has long vowed
to make environmental issues a priority -- is hoping to reverse the plastic tsunami, says climate change minister Malik Amin Aslam.As of
August 14, plastic bags will be banned in the capital Islamabad, with violators subject to heavy fines
"This love affair with plastic has to end in Pakistan," says Aslam, who hopes that the ban in Islamabad will serve as a "model" for the rest
of the country.Some shopkeepers who spoke to AFP in Islamabad appeared prepared for the move -- but others said they were unaware of the new
measure.Plastics manufacturers -- who say up to 400,000 people work directly or indirectly in the industry -- have also raised concerns.But
the Khan´s government says action is necessary regardless.Aslam says: "It´s a health menace, it´s an economic menace, it is an
environmental menace
It is something that we need to get rid of."TheIndianSubcontinent has not verified the content of the source
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