MAP Protection de l’environnement: L’Arabie Saoudite lance l’initiative verte à Abidjan ANP Niger : 1600 tonnes de sucre pour parer aux besoins en ce mois béni de ramadan AGP Gabon/CNIE : la campagne de délivrance du numéro d’identification personnel s’ouvre le 3 avril prochain AGP Gabon/Vie chère : 80,3 millions F CFA de pénalités en février 2024 AGP Gabon : Le président Oligui Nguema reçoit le soutien de la diaspora gabonaise multi-continentale G10 AGP Gabon/Plan National de Développement de la Transition : un investissement de 3 000 milliards de F CFA pour 288 projets AGP Gabon/Réforme du système judiciaire : signature d’un accord de coopération entre le ministère de la Justice et le PNUD MAP Plus de 38.600 réfugiés et demandeurs d’asile enregistrés en Somalie, selon le HCR MAP Sa Majesté le Roi, Amir Al Mouminine, préside la quatrième causerie religieuse du mois sacré de Ramadan 1445 H ACI Congo/Culture: Claise Bostard Akonga entend récompenser les meilleurs artistes congolais

Air pollution killed nearly 5,000 people in Afghanistan last year


  13 Janvier      45        Société (44865),

 

Kabul, Jan. 13, (dpa/GNA) – Nearly 5,000 people died in Afghanistan due to air pollution in 2020, the health ministry told dpa.
They died due to respiratory and heart diseases which are considered to be caused by air pollution, Ministry spokeswoman Masouma Jafari said.
Last year, the Afghan capital was considered the world’s worst polluted city.
Around 10 per cent of those killed due to these diseases in Afghanistan were in Kabul city, the ministry figures show.
According to the air quality index, air in Kabul becomes “very unhealthy” at night during winter, placing Kabul among the most polluted cities in 2021.
The head of Wazir Akbar Khan hospital, Dr. Abdullah Ahmadi, told dpa that the hospital has received more than 600 patients in less than one month.
“An average of twenty patients with respiratory diseases visit our hospital on daily basis,” Ahmadi said. “Most of these problems are because of air pollution.”
Excessive use of coal, old vehicles that produce a large amount of smoke and unpaved roads are the main reasons for increasing air pollution, an official at the National Environment Protection Agency (NEPA) told dpa.
The problem is exacerbated by electricity shortage, expensive petrol, and low-quality fuel.
Since last year, officials have begun a crackdown on local businesses thought to be the main contributor to air pollution by burning scrap tires and plastics to provide heating.
The air pollution problem is a global challenge. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), air pollution kills an estimated seven million people worldwide every year.
GNA
PDC

Dans la même catégorie