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Indonesia
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Indonesia’s fight to clean up the Citarum, the ‘world’s most polluted river’

Indonesia’s Citarum River is so heavily polluted with rubbish that you can barely see the water

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Moving rubbish in Java’s Citarum River which is clogged with plastic. Photo: dpa
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Wida Widiarti has spent her entire life near the Citarum River on Indonesia’s main island of Java.

That means she has witnessed first-hand how the river mutated from an important lifeline into a disgusting symbol of extreme environmental pollution.

Time and again, the Citarum has been described in reports as the “world’s most polluted river”.

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“People clean up, but the rubbish comes back anyway,” said Widiarti, who lives near Bandung.

Surrounded by mountains, rice paddies and volcanoes, the Javanese metropolis some 100km (62 miles) southeast of Jakarta, is a popular destination for tourists, but like in so many regions in Southeast Asia, a massive waste problem lurks beneath the picturesque surface.
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Widiarti and her little daughter stand on the river bank and look at the murky water, littered with plastic bottles, broken flip-flops and other rubbish that is barely recognisable.

Some months are worse than others, she said. At times, the water was almost covered entirely by waste. “Even in better times, the Citarum is never free of rubbish,” she said.

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