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Boys played amid stinky puddles and dodged trash sludge oozing from plastic bags carpeting a muddy riverbed in Saidpur, a village that connects to Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, by a narrow road. Munira recalls the river stones glinting under fresh water when she was a child. Now, "there's so much trash," says the year-old, who has only one name. Pakistan has long struggled with its copious plastic bag trash — the country consumes tens of billions of single-use bags a year.
Estimates range from 55 billion to over billion, and there's little waste management. Over more than a decade, Pakistani provinces have repeatedly imposed bans on single-use plastic bags made out of polyethylene also called polythene , but those bans have faltered. Residents haven't been able to access cheap alternatives, like compostable plastic bags, and police haven't been able to effectively enforce the bans. The coalition government of Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has been in power for the past year, hopes that this time will be different.
In July, his administration announced a ban on disposable plastic bags in Islamabad and surrounding areas, including Saidpur. When the ban takes effect on Aug.
Manufacturers will face larger fines for making plastic bags, as will shops for distributing them. There is a provision that for hospital waste, for municipal waste, big bags will be exempted Looming in the minds of environmentalists and officials is more than a decade of failed attempts to ban single-use plastic bags.