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Mumbai residents took to the streets on Tuesday to protest toxic smog from a burning landfill site, while activists said the authorities should tackle the underlying problems and not bar ragpickers from the city’s oldest dumping ground.
The fires at the Deonar landfill, which broke out at the weekend, are the second major landfill fires there this year. Civic authorities said they would investigate and put in place measures including limiting entry to ragpickers.
Nearby schools were closed and the toxic fumes lowered the air quality in the coastal city, India’s financial hub.
Deonar, which opened in 1927, is among Asia’s oldest and largest landfills. Spread across more than 300 acres (120 hectares) of land, the piles of trash are several storeys high.
Children often accompany their parents to the site, and few wear protective gear such as masks and gloves. Respiratory illnesses, skin disease and addictions are rife, activists say.
Fires are caused mainly by gases from rotting garbage and other combustible material, experts say. The city can afford to enforce separation of garbage at source and treat it at the landfills, but the system is beset by corruption, Stalin said.
The landfills occupy prime real estate and builders would rather see the sites shut, he said.
Meanwhile, the city’s air quality has worsened and schools near the landfill have been shut. Children could still be seen playing cricket nearby, ignoring the thick plumes of grey smoke.
“It’s like the Apocalypse,” said Vinod Shetty, head of Acorn Foundation, which trains and organises ragpickers in the city.
There may be up to 200,000 ragpickers in Mumbai, mostly from the Dalit and other lower-caste communities, Shetty said. Women and children are vulnerable to exploitation and abuse, picked on by men and police, who see them as criminals, he said.
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