Jakarta: Indonesia has returned five containers of rubbish to the US and will not become a “dumping ground”, officials said on Saturday, the latest Southeast Asian country to return imported waste. The containers were supposed to contain only paper scrap, as per the customs documents. Instead they were loaded with other waste including bottles, plastic waste, and diapers, said senior environment ministry official Sayid Muhadhar.
“This is not appropriate and we don’t want to be a dumping ground,” Muhadhar told AFP. The five containers—owned by a Canadian company—were shipped from Seattle in the US to Indonesia’s second biggest city Surabaya in late March, Muhadhar said. It was not immediately clear where the rubbish originated from.
Indonesia is currently examining several other containers in Jakarta’s port and the city of Batam on the island of Sumatra. It is the latest country to return imported rubbish after neighbouring Malaysia vowed to ship back hundreds of tonnes of plastic waste last month.
The Philippines has ordered tonnes of garbage dumped in the country to be shipped back to Canada, sparking a diplomatic row between the two nations. For years China received the bulk of scrap plastic from around the world, but closed its doors to foreign refuse last year to clean up its environment.