Haze forces shutting of schools in Indonesia

Source:AFP Published: 2019/9/19 19:33:43

Photo taken on Sept.18, 2019 shows a city view of haze shrouded Singapore. Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia were shrouded in haze recently due to forest fires. (Photo: Xinhua)



Thousands of schools were shuttered across Malaysia and Indonesia on Thursday, affecting at least 1.7 million pupils, officials said, as toxic haze from rampant forest fires sent air quality plummeting.

Nearly 2,500 schools were ordered to shut their doors in Malaysia - including nearly 300 in the smog-hit capital Kuala Lumpur - over soaring health concerns sparked by toxic haze from out-of-control blazes in Indonesia's Sumatra and Borneo islands.

Indonesia said hundreds of schools in hard-hit Riau province on Sumatra would also be shut Thursday, with 800 closed in one district alone, while about 1,300 were shut in its Central Kalimantan province on Borneo.

The closures affected at least 1.7 million students in Malaysia. It was not clear how many pupils were forced to stay home in neighbouring Indonesia.

Jakarta is deploying thousands of security forces and water-bombing aircraft to tackle the blazes, mostly started by ­illegal fires set to clear land for plantations.

The fires belch smog across Southeast Asia annually, but this year's are the worst since 2015 and have added to concerns about wildfire outbreaks worldwide exacerbating global warming.

A growing number of Malaysians were suffering health problems due to the haze, with authorities saying there had been a sharp increase in outpatients at government hospitals - many suffering dry and itchy eyes. Air quality was in the "unhealthy" range across Singapore Thursday morning, according to the National Environment Agency.



Posted in: ASIA-PACIFIC

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