[Skip Header and Navigation] [Jump to Main Content]
Home
PEARL World Youth News
A student news service inspired by journalist Daniel Pearl

Primary Links

  • About Us
  • Pearl Team
  • Join Us
  • Partners
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Environment
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Music and Arts
  • Health
  • Multimedia
  • Reprinting Articles
  • Code of Ethics

Map of Pearl Countries

Join Us

We are looking for secondary school students to join us as PEARL Reporters. If you'd like to take our online training course to become a certified PEARL Reporter or if you'd like more information, click here.

Creative Commons License

Syndicate

Syndicate content

Project News


We are thrilled to announce two new partnerships. PEARL will collaborate with Worldfocus and NewsHour with Jim Lehrer to share its student-produced stories with an even wider audience. 

Read two PEARL stories recently posted on the websites of these news shows:
Child labor in Ghana: More than a million children at work
Student Reporters Interview Palestinian Family Living Near an Israeli Settlement

Message from Daniel Pearl's parents

Partners

  • iEARN Logo

Bookmark/Search:

  • Delicious Delicious
  • Digg Digg
  • Reddit Reddit
  • Furl Furl
  • Facebook Facebook
  • Technorati Technorati
Home

Garbage Adds Ugly Colors to Karachi

Send to friend
By Fatima Tuz Zehra
August 11, 2009


Karachi, PAKISTAN - Karachi is widely known as a colorful city -- from the clothes people wear, the food they eat, or the highly decorated public buses they travel in – but some of the color comes from garbage strewn along roads, streets, parks and other public places.
 

Pakistan produces 48,000 tons of solid waste every day, most of it dumped in makeshift landfills or burned in incinerators, according to Business Recorder, a financial news site.

It isn’t uncommon to see heaps of cloth strips outside the tailor’s, wasted food outside a restaurant or coffee shop, wrappings and empty boxes lining roads, and plenty of assorted rubbish at the beaches, all despite several clean-up operations to date. Also, “after the completion of construction works, construction materials are left lying there itself,” said Tatheer Fatima, 19, a Bahria University student.
 
People living in flats generally discard their waste by leaving their bins outside their front doors. Each building’s janitor then dumps the garbage in one of the numerous landfill sites in the city.
 
When asked to describe a garbage dump, 7-year-old Fatima Sughra Anis recited a list of contents: dirty polythene bags, fruit and vegetable peels, remains of pillows and mattresses and human excreta. Her 13-year-old sister Muhaddisa Anis added used diapers and the charred remains of a car. “There’s an ugly swarm of flies and mosquitoes around it,” she said.
 
Often, once these landfills are filled to capacity, someone sets fire to the piles of trash. That adds polluting and irritating smoke to the stench and ugly filth. The people who live around the landfills cannot keep their windows open because the smoke and smell are overwhelming.

The burning of waste, however, is not just carried out informally. According to DAWN News, over 600 tons of hospital waste is generated in Karachi daily and, of that, some 130 tons are incinerated.

Most people blame the government for the lack of proper disposal and recycling facilities at the root of the problem. “The government should provide citizens with proper system for disposal of garbage,” said Wajiha Saleem, 13, a seventh grader at Habib Girls School.

Several other students suggested ways the government should take action. Sidra Hussain, 12, said litterers should be punished. Attiya Abbas, 14, said they should pay fines.

“The government should install fixed dustbins,” said Naima Sheriff, another Bahria University student. “So that people don’t take them to their homes.”

Others hold Karachi’s citizens responsible. “People who litter the country hate the country,” said Muneeba Naeem, 14, another seventh grader in the same school. Her classmate, Noor-e-Saba Saleem, added, “They are careless, illiterate and irresponsible.”

But at least one teenager seemed nonplussed about all the criticism. "When I see a dustbin, I throw trash in,” said Fatima Jafri, 18. “Otherwise I don't bother."

Creative Commons License
PEARL World Youth News is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
Based on a work at http://pearl.iearn.org.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://pearl.iearn.org.

[Jump to Top] [Jump to Main Content]