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Indonesia doing its best to combat haze: disaster chief
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Oct 6, 2015


India activists back 'pollution tax' to clean Delhi air
New Delhi (AFP) Oct 6, 2015 - Environmentalists called Tuesday for a pollution tax in the Indian capital after a top court ordered the city and national governments to quickly come up with a plan to clean New Delhi's notoriously filthy air.

The Delhi government has long been criticised for failing to curb pollution from industries and mounting traffic, in a city ranked by the WHO as having the worst air quality in the world.

Acting on a petition from a lawyer, the Supreme Court on Monday ordered the Delhi and national governments to submit a plan within three days on clearing the city's air before winter starts, when quality deteriorates.

Delhi's Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) said thousands of diesel trucks pouring into the city every night account for nearly one third of the area's total pollution levels.

The research body called for a tax on these 52,000 commercial vehicles, many of which only enter the city, en route to another state, because of a lack of bypasses on India's broken highways.

"Travel through Delhi needs to be charged so that there is a clear disincentive for the use of these roads," Anumita Roychowdhury, CSE's executive director, said in a statement.

Harish Salve, the lawyer who filed the petition, said many of the trucks also only drove through Delhi to avoid paying tolls outside the city.

"This is a serious issue. We will take up this matter on Thursday. We want a positive response," Chief Justice H.L.Dattu reportedly told the court on Monday.

A World Health Organization study of 1,600 cities released last year showed Delhi had the world's highest annual average concentration of small airborne particles known as PM2.5 -- higher even than Beijing.

These extremely fine particles of less than 2.5 micrometres in diameter are linked to increased rates of chronic bronchitis, lung cancer and heart disease as they penetrate deep into the lungs and can pass into the bloodstream.

India's environment court earlier this year ordered a ban on diesel vehicles older than 10 years in Delhi, but the embargo has not yet been introduced.

Indonesia's disaster chief Tuesday rejected criticism his country was not doing enough to combat the haze crisis, saying every possible resource was being deployed to fight forest fires blanketing Southeast Asia in smog.

Indonesia has come under growing pressure from its neighbours in recent weeks as thick smoke from fires on Sumatra and the Indonesian part of Borneo has sent pollution levels soaring in Malaysia and Singapore, where schools have been closed and major outdoor events cancelled.

The blazes flare up annually during the dry season as fires are illegally set to clear land for cultivation. But an El Nino weather system has made conditions drier, with this year's haze on track to be the worst on record.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has urged Indonesia to take action, saying only Jakarta has the authority to investigate the cause of the fires and convict those responsible.

But Indonesia has rejected suggestions it is not doing enough, with the head of the country's disaster agency saying all possible resources were being used.

"We have done the best we can," Willem Rampangilei told reporters.

"It is understandable if other countries are upset, but we Indonesians are more upset."

Pollution in Singapore and Malaysia has risen beyond hazardous levels since the haze outbreak began last month, while levels more than five times that limit have been recorded on the Indonesian part of Borneo island.

Borneo is shared between Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei.

Schools in many parts of Malaysia were closed for a second straight day Tuesday, part of a two-day shutdown announced at the weekend as pollution levels soared. Air quality readings were unhealthy along parts of country's west coast facing Sumatra.

The haze spread as far as southern Thailand, where pollution levels were rising fast, prompting junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha to call for a regional meeting on the crisis.

"We have to talk with the countries where it (the haze) originates," he said.

Singapore has offered to help combat the fires, volunteering a Hercules plane and IT expertise, but Indonesia has insisted it has the equipment necessary to do the job.

Rampangilei said Indonesia had four planes on standby to conduct cloud seeding, but conditions in the past week had stymied attempts to produce artificial rain.

Efforts by more than a dozen helicopters to waterbomb hot spots have several times been thwarted by thick smoke, he added.

Rampangilei said more troops and police would be deployed to fight the fires, joining more than 20,000 personnel already battling the blazes, although he did not say how many reinforcements were to be sent.

The haze has had a devastating impact on people's health in Indonesia, and more than 140,000 people have reported respiratory infections in smog-choked areas.

burs-dsa-sr/iw


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