Singapore: Throw-Away Nation
The disposable age, along with increasing affluence, is resulting in a rising tide of waste generated in Singapore.
SINCE domestic helper Cherryann-Lynn Santos, 36, started working for a family in Singapore nine years ago, she has been "shopping" at the dumpster at her condominium in the east for gifts to send home for Christmas. "We find clothes and shoes that are still brand-new because they still have price tags. Even the toys are in the boxes and untouched," the Filipino maid says.
Ms Santos, a mother of a four-year-old girl, says that she and her friends, mostly domestic helpers, would help themselves to the "treasure" and send them home.
"Singaporeans and ang-mos (Hokkien for Caucasians) throw out things that are practically new. Even the furniture are better than the ones in our homes back in the Philippines so we dismantle (them) and send them back," she says.
Copyright SPH Media. All rights reserved.
TRENDING NOW
Thai and Vietnamese farmers may stop planting rice because of the Iran war. Here’s why
US-China rivalry and the Kindleberger Trap: Why inaction – not escalation – is the biggest risk
Middle East-linked energy supply shocks put Asean Power Grid back in focus
As more Asean states turn to Russia for fuel, will Moscow boost its influence in the region?