2006年VOA标准英语-Mali's Capital Has Recycling Woes(在线收听) |
By Nico Colombant ------------------------------------------ Used plastic bags and empty bottles lie in many parts of Bamako. Plastic bags are being used for everything, including selling water and hot food. There are maybe just a handful of trash cans in all of Bamako, a sprawling city, so, once used, people just drop their plastic bags and let them fly away. The high usage of plastic bags has also created a huge health hazard for humans. There is minimal trash collection here. The government supplies a few donkeys, and a few teams go out in the mornings to collect trash to dump it off at a few sites in the city. But it seems like just a drop in the big litter box that Bamako is becoming. Market women gather here and do their own recycling. They will sell food and water from these plastic bags they recovered from trash. There is also bottle recycling that takes place. Ichiaka used to be a shepherd, but he says he makes more money now. He makes daily trips on his bike to collect bottles, and when he resells them to market wholesalers, he makes a few cents on each bottle. He deals in both water bottles and acid bottles. The head of a Malian consumer's association, Hortense Coulibaly, is devastated, by both the problem and the response. She says there is a lack of sensitivity to both the pollution problem and the subsequent health hazards. There are departments in different government ministries supposed to tackle the problem, but little is being done. Coulibaly adds politicians do not feel concerned, since they do not have to live among the trash as poor people do. In one popular neighborhood, Faladje, though, her association has helped a small group organize a very serious-looking and effective trash collection. They were able to get government funding and tractors for this. They go out every morning, making a few parts of Bamako, at least, a little cleaner and healthier. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/5/32338.html |