South asia
Unique coast guard: The Sindh Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) is working for the formation of a monitoring and liaison committee to improve the dismal environmental condition in the islands off the Karachi coast and check the unhindered discharge of effluents into the sea. SEPAdirector general Shafiq Khuso says the committee would comprise representatives of all stakeholders, including the city government, water sewerage board, industrial associations, sepa , Karachi Port Trust (KPT), the fisheries department, fishermen cooperative societies and environmental experts.
About 200 million gallons of industrial and untreated effluents are discharged into the sea daily through the Lyari River, says Yahya Usmani, chief of KPTMarine Control Department. The living condition of the fisherfolk in the islands off the coast is pathetic. "The fishing community earns considerable foreign exchange for the country but its living condition is miserable,' rue Haji Abdullah, Muhammad Ali and Mahmood Ibrahim, social welfare activists.
Poison rain: Farmers in Afghanistan's Nangarhar province, one of the biggest opium growing regions in the country, allege that the UShas sprayed poison on their fields, destroying even food crops and making people ill. Moammed Rafi Safi, a doctor in the area, confirms that the number of people with skin, eye and respiratory diseases had increased markedly since the time the alleged spraying took place.
The government launched a probe into the matter on November 18, 2004. Though the UShad recently said it wanted to act tough against drug trade in Afghanistan, the USmilitary has denied the aerial spraying. But Nangarhar's provincial governor Din Mohammed disagrees: "No doubt an aerial spray has taken place. I don't know who might be behind this but you know that the airspace of Afghanistan is under UScontrol.' Opium production in Afghanistan has increased by 64 per cent in 2004 compared to last year, according to a UN report.
Related Content
- Empowering women for effective climate change adaptation: the role of the private sector
- South Asia macro poverty outlook 2024: country-by-country analysis and projections for the developing world
- Addressing the impact of climate change on women farmers’ health in South Asia
- Urgency of heatwave risk management
- Comparative study of carbon rights in the context of jurisdictional REDD+: case studies from Africa, Asia and the Pacific, and Latin America and the Caribbean
- Fossil fuel subsidies and GHG emissions: firm-level empirical evidence from developing Asia