Naples: Rubbish Piling Up
In Naples, piles of foul-smelling rubbish are piling up in the streets risking disease. According to Mayor Rosa Russo Iervolino, 2,740 tonnes of rubbish have been amassed in the streets of the southern Italian city over the past week. The rubbish is not being collected because there is nowhere to dispose of it.
“The situation is tragic. Summer is approaching and the heat is bound to make things worse,” Iervolino said.
“No one has collected rubbish since Saturday. Bins are overflowing, doing serious damage to our town’s image,” said Lello Staiano, councillor in charge of tourism in Massa Lubrense.
Residents of Naples have begun burning heaps of rubbish that have piled up for more than a week. Fire brigades extinguished more than 150 fires in and around the city overnight. The burning of chemicals has added to the already putrid smell of decomposing refuse.
The latest refuse crisis, a repeat of a similar crisis that at its peak saw residents clash with police three years ago, is due to the fact that the Campania region produces more rubbish than it can dispose of.
Nearby landfills are saturated and residents oppose the construction of new dumps and incinerators, which they say pose a health and environmental health hazard.
The problems are compounded by the fact that the main Villaricca dump is due to close on May 26. Government plans to open four new dumps have so far been blocked by angry residents.