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Through thick, not thin, say ragpickers
Sandeep Unnithan / Indian Express 23nov98
Mumbai, November 22: Mumbai's army of ragpickers who trawl the
streets looking for recyclable material have had enough of the
thin plastic carry bag, better known as the jhabla.
``Halka maal hain, bilkul nahin chalta.'' 25-year-old Rana Haldar
peeps out of a putrefying rubbish dump in the city's slum and
scrap suburb Dharavi. Haldar ignores the thin plastic bag and
rifles around the bin looking for tins and paper.
Another ragpicker, Mohammed Yunus, has since graduated to scouring
the streets for the more profitable sack cloth. ``A few years
ago, I had to stumble around for a whole day before I could collect
a kilo of thin plastic bags which fetched only Rs 1.50.'' He now
earns Rs 150 a day collecting cloth. And then you realise why
the thin plastic bags lie around waiting to get into sewer lines
or dirty the roads. It's because no self-respecting ragpicker
is willing to touch them. As any one of them will tell you, it
takes a day of back-breaking effort to collect 1,000 bags to make
awaist-high saleable kilo. ``It's just not worth the effort,''
says ragpicker Abdul Rahim, who's picking up the thicker plastic
bags.
Ragpickers have welcomed the government's proposal to ban thin
carry bags and instead introduce the thicker bags of a minimum
thickness of 80 gauge. ``It will make our job far easier,'' Rahim
says. Squatting on his pavement shop at Dharavi, a wizened sixty-something
scrap trader Abdul Haq has had enough of the thin plastic bag.
``Yeh jhabla nahin, jhamela hain,'' curses the grizzle bearded
trader, separating the carry bags from a mound of plastic waste.
The rest of the plastic is sold to bigger traders for Rs three
a kg, but as the thin bags are a strict no-no, Haq has to separate
them from his precious pile. The thick plastic bags are melted
down into little pellets, the raw material for a thriving industry
which makes buckets, pipes and footwear out of them.
But the thin bags sit in a sack on his roof. ``Small shop owners
like us don't buy these bags, nobody wantsthem,'' scrap dealer
Abdul Hamid adds. ``The government must ban these bags. When factories
stop producing thin bags, the public will automatically stop using
them,'' Haq advises. He then goes on to extol the virtues of paper
bags to curious bystanders. ``The paper at least dissolved in
water, but not these plastic bags.'' On the Dadar beach, ragpicker
Dattaram Kadam rummages through a rubbish tip with a stick. Thin
plastic bags don't figure on his list, but the thicker milk pouches
do. He washes the thick milk bags in the sea, dries them before
selling them for as high as Rs 20 a kg. ``Thicker bags are of
great use to us,'' he says.
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