'Toxic bomb' ticks on Maldives rubbish island

Descending by plane into the Maldives offers a panoramic view of azure seas and coral-fringed islands, but as the tarmac nears, billowing smoke in the middle distance reveals an environmental calamity.

'Toxic bomb' ticks on Maldives rubbish island
A Bangladeshi immigrant helps keep a fire going in the country's largest trash dump
at Thilafushi Island on September 6, 2013 [Credit: AFP]
Thilafushi Island, a half-hour boat trip from the capital, is surrounded by  the same crystal clear waters and white sand that have made the Indian Ocean  archipelago a honeymoon destination for the rich and famous.

But no holidaymaker sets foot here and none could imagine from their plane  seats that the rising smoke is the waste from residents and previous visitors  being set alight by men like 40-year-old Fusin.

A migrant from Bangladesh, he is one of several dozen employees on “Rubbish  Island” — the biggest waste dump in the country where he’s paid $350 a month  for 12-hour shifts, seven days a week.

With no safety equipment bar a pair of steel-capped boots, he clambers over  a stinking mountain of garbage, eyes streaming and voice choked after four  years’ exposure to thick, toxic fumes.

Beneath his feet lie the discards of the cramped capital Male and the local  tourism industry that has helped turn the collection of more than 1,000 islands  into the wealthiest country in South Asia.

Bottles of beer — illegal for local Muslims but ubiquitous on tourists’  islands — lie scorched next to piles of half-burnt hotel forms requesting  speed boat transfers.

'Toxic bomb' ticks on Maldives rubbish island
Residents of Male, the capital of the Maldives, unload trash that will be put on a boat that ferries
the refuse from the the capital to nearby Thilafushi Island on September 8, 2013 [Credit: AFP]
A discarded plastic diving mask lies in a heap of packets of juice, plastic  bags and rotting vegetables that awaits Fusin’s attention.

“Before we used to separate cardboard and glass, but now the company is not  so strong,” says site manager Islam Uddin, a friendly man who has worked here  for 16 years.

He complains of neglect from successive governments and laments that a  privatisation deal signed in 2008 with a German-Indian waste management company  has stalled as a result of local political upheaval.

Only plastic bottles, engine oil, metals and paper are collected, with the  waste sent by boat to India, forming the biggest export from the Maldives to  its giant neighbour to the northeast.

All of the rest, including electronics that escape the attention of  hundreds of human scavengers and batteries, go up in flames — with no sign of  the high-tech incinerators promised as part of the privatisation deal.

“The batteries contain lead. There are products with mercury in them. All  of these can easily get into the food chain,” says Ali Rilwan, an  environmentalist with local organisation Bluepeace Maldives.

“Unlike landfill, this is the ocean they are filling.”

'Toxic bomb' ticks on Maldives rubbish island
Fusin, a forty-year old Bangladeshi immigrant carries a sac of recyclable material as he walks
in the country's largest trash dump at Thilafushi Island on September 6, 2013 [Credit: AFP]
As he speaks, waves lap at the edge of the dump which has been expanding  steadily into the sea since 1993 and upwards — forming one of the highest  points in the whole country, 80 percent of which is less than a metre above sea  level.

He cites government figures showing visitors to the Maldives created on  average 7.2 kilograms of waste per day, compared with 2.8 kilograms for  residents of Male, which make up a third of the 350,000-strong population.

Tourists, at nearly a million last year, outnumber locals by a ratio of  about three-to-one.

Open burning  

Local authorities plan to stop the toxic open burning on the island and the  private operator of the site, finally set to start work after a five-year  delay, will build an incinerator.

Better waste management in the capital Male through door-to-door collection  and recycling will also help to reduce environmental damage, says a city  councillor from the capital, Ahmed Kareem.

“The project that is going ahead will monitor air pollution and also the  sea pollution near Thilafushi Island and so no further expansion by waste will  be done for Thilafushi,” Kareem told AFP.