-
Chiefs reach Super Rugby final in Crusaders humiliation
-
Fight against HIV 'in peril' due to aid cuts, UN warns
-
Stocks up, oil down on Mideast deal hopes
-
USA play first World Cup finals game on home soil since 1994
-
At Romania's edge, quiet life meets threat of war
-
Australia coach Popovic extends contract ahead of World Cup opener
-
Switzerland split on immigration vote: four perspectives
-
A year after deadly Air India crash, families await answers
-
The migration pact: What's in the EU's landmark asylum reform?
-
US submarine group to arrive in Australia this year: minister
-
Indonesian Messi superfan welcomes World Cup
-
India migrant evictions seed fear in Bangladesh border towns
-
Thai princess dies aged 47 after three years in hospital
-
S. Korea's ex-president gets 30 years over North Korea drone incident
-
Yangon's furtive party scene belies junta claims of normality
-
Tehran says no final decision as Trump touts imminent deal
-
South Korea defeat Czechs to make strong World Cup start
-
Shakira and protests as World Cup kicks off in Mexico
-
Science fiction? Musk's lofty SpaceX goals unrealistic, skeptics say
-
Asia stocks up, oil down on Mideast deal hopes
-
'Battery on wheels': Sweden powers homes with EVs
-
From cage fights to the White House, UFC marches into mainstream
-
Happy Birthday Mr. President: Trump to turn 80 with cage fight
-
Blues face uphill task in Hurricanes Super Rugby semi
-
Mideast war helps electric motorbikes boom in Africa
-
Pope ends Spain visit with migrant meetings
-
Ex-Tottenham owner sells art collection in blockbuster auction
-
Displaced families bury Hezbollah dead in temporary graves
-
Lightning's Kucherov wins Hart Trophy as NHL MVP
-
Marsch says wanted 'responsibility' of leading Canada in home World Cup
-
Co-hosts Mexico kick off World Cup with dramatic victory
-
Taylor Swift becomes youngest woman in Songwriters Hall of Fame
-
Aguirre says Mexico beat cramps and stage fright in World Cup opener
-
Japan captain Endo out of World Cup, ends international career
-
Iran's World Cup players take to the training pitch
-
Antarctic Peninsula sees record high June temperatures
-
Mexico beat South Africa to kick off World Cup
-
Police, protesters clash outside maiden World Cup match in Mexico
-
US stocks rally, oil prices fall as Trump calls off fresh Iran strikes
-
Alisson unfazed by doubts over Brazil heading into World Cup
-
Pulisic 'ready to battle' Paraguay in US World Cup opener
-
Trump claims 'great' deal with Iran, signing expected in Europe
-
UN experts, MSF condemn crackdown on women by Afghan morality police
-
SpaceX to make historic IPO that could make Musk a trillionaire
-
First leather bag made from T-Rex cells fails to sell at Paris auction
-
Drones, lone wolves, rowdy fans: US security officials ready for World Cup
-
Trump cancels Iran strikes, touts imminent deal
-
Ethiopia claims Tigrayan forces preparing offensive against govt
-
Spiky disciplinarian Mourinho can restore order at Real Madrid
-
Why Real Madrid are gambling on Mourinho return
'Licence to hide': Western plastic waste dumped in Myanmar
In a working-class neighbourhood of Myanmar's Yangon, plastic waste is piled a metre high, the toxic product of what a recent investigation said is rampant dumping of Western trash.
For several years sites across Shwepyithar township have been filling up with trash that chokes fields, blocks the drainage of monsoon rains and causes fire risks.
The trash is the runoff of global plastic production, which has more than doubled since the start of the century to reach 460 million tonnes per year.
"In the past, during the rainy season I could pick watercress from this field to eat," one resident told AFP, asking not to be identified for security reasons.
"Because of the plastic waste, now we can't get any watercress to eat. Instead, we get a smell."
An investigation released this week by collaborative newsroom Lighthouse Reports and six partners has found some of the waste dumped here comes from the West.
The mix includes wrapping and containers for products ranging from Danone yoghurt to Polish company Spomlek's cheese.
Items from German-owned UK supermarket Lidl and pasta packaging from Canada's Unico have also been found.
None of these originated in Myanmar, but they have ended up there despite a law prohibiting the import of plastic waste unless it is clean and ready to recycle.
The ban was imposed after China stopped accepting foreign plastic waste in 2018.
Several local recycling factories admitted to Lighthouse Reports that waste they can't process is often dumped or burned.
- Porous border -
Just how the waste enters Myanmar, and in what quantities, is unclear.
The investigation suggests Thailand is a key passage for illegally exported plastics.
According to United Nations Comtrade data, most of Myanmar's plastic waste imports come from Thailand.
Almost 7,500 tons entered in 2021, the last year it reported figures.
But the roughly 2,400-kilometre (1,490-mile) border the countries share is extremely porous and crossed with ease by traffickers and smugglers.
Officials on both sides of the border do little to inspect arriving waste, Lighthouse Reports said.
"The data collected is often out of date, and there's no check on that data," said Willie Wilson, former vice chair of Interpol's Pollution Crime Working Group, referring not just to Comtrade but all trade data.
"We're left with this fog of mis-declared, missing data. It's a licence to hide in plain sight."
In July Myanmar's junta said there was a $1.639 billion difference between what Thailand said it exported to Myanmar, and what Myanmar said it imported from Thailand.
The yawning discrepancy "might be caused by illegal trade", its Illegal Trade Eradication Steering Committee said.
AFP contacted several of the companies whose products were found in Myanmar to ask how they might have arrived, but received no immediate reply.
Locals in Shwepyithar told AFP that much of the waste dumped in their neighbourhood came from recycling factories in a nearby industrial zone.
But the risks of protesting such a move in Myanmar, which has been run by a military junta since a 2021 coup, are high.
That has left an open area in Shwepyithar once earmarked for a football field transformed into a morass of plastic waste, one resident said.
"I know it's not good for the long term," she told AFP, requesting anonymity to speak about the sensitive issues.
"I don't like it at all," said another, who similarly spoke on condition of not being identified.
"But we can't do anything."
R.Halabi--SF-PST