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Paradise lost on Maldives' rubbish island

China Daily | Updated: 2009-01-05 07:32

Paradise lost on Maldives' rubbish island

It may be known as a tropical paradise, an archipelago of 1,200 coral islands in the Indian Ocean. But the traditional image of the Maldives hides a dirty secret: the world's biggest rubbish island.

A few miles and a short boat ride from the Maldivian capital, Mal, Thilafushi began life as a reclamation project in 1992. The artificial island was built to solve Mal's refuse problem. But today, with more than 10,000 tourists a week in the Maldives adding their waste, the rubbish island now covers 50 hectares.

So much is being deposited that the island is growing at a square meter a day. There are more than 3 dozen factories, a mosque and homes for 150 Bangladeshi migrants who sift through the mounds of refuse beneath palm-fringed streets.

Paradise lost on Maldives' rubbish island

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