Nepal: Residents of the Teku area, which is in Ward 12 of Kathmandu Metropolitan City, padlocked the waste transfer station after piles of garbage collected from households in the metropolitan city and brought to the station were not disposed of for several days.
Enraged locals complained
that they were forced to resort to protest the
“They have turned the transfer station into a dumping site,”
said Rajiv Man Shakya, a local of Mayalbari in Teku. “We can neither eat nor
sleep properly because of the stench emanating from the garbage transfer
station.”
Garbage transfer station is a facility where garbage
collected from the households of the metropolis in small vehicles are unloaded
and reloaded into larger trucks to send them to the landfill site.
Teku residents’ complaints come at a time when everyone
residing in the
Addressing the issue of city waste management is one of the
selling points of all the mayoral candidates in
Door-to-door garbage collection has been halted for about a
month and the Environment Management Department of the
Officials said that garbage collection and dumping has
halted due to protests by locals in many areas on the way to Sisdole landfill
site in Nuwakot.
The locals in some places have demanded better amenities,
while in other places, the people don’t want the foul-smelling garbage trucks
passing through their neighbourhoods.
Shiva Deuja, who works at a
fruit shop near the transfer station, said that his owner left for home after a
severe headache due to the strong smell from the dump.
“It has been very difficult to breathe here,” said Deuja.
“Can you imagine how much we have been suffering?”
Locals of the Teku area said that their lives have become
miserable.
“Not only do we have to bear the stinking smell but kites
and crows also bring the rotting garbage to our rooftops and balconies,” said
Raju Maharjan, another local. “Of all the things, we are deprived of even fresh
air to breathe.”
Waste management has been a perennial problem in
“I am 45 and I have been residing here for the last 25
years,” said Rajiv Shakya, a lawyer. “We have seen many governments but none
has worked seriously to address the garbage problem.”
Officials at the Environment Management Department at the
“The protest is not only in one place but in several
places,” said Sarita Rai, chief of the Department. “Locals in different places
have different demands. But how can we agree to their demand that garbage
trucks should not use the road in their areas?”
According to a rough estimate by the metropolis, 18
municipalities in the
As garbage disposal has stopped for the last 22 days, over
26,000 metric tons of garbage has piled up in the Valley. The City’s
Environment Management Department said that it will take around 10 days to
clear the garbage of the Valley if obstruction is cleared immediately. Each day
150 garbage trucks would transport Valley’s garbage to the dumping site in
Sisdole, Nuwakot.
Rai, chief of the Environment Management Department,
meanwhile, admitted that there is no possibility of any agreement between the City
and the locals as the demands are impractical and impossible to fulfill.
Since the obstruction started in Sisdole, the City has been
dumping the Valley’s garbage at the transfer station at Teku.
“I can’t imagine how difficult garbage management will be
this monsoon when rains damage the road to Sisdole and garbage transfer remains
halted for many days,” said Rai.
Arjun Poudel
kathmandu post
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