More than 500 Malaysians marched on Saturday in the hazy air of Kuala Lumpur for the MYClimateStrike, part of a series of climate strike rallies held worldwide between September 20 and September 27.
Protesters displayed banners largely concentrating on the forest fires in the region, a yearly occurrence for almost four decades, and the subsequent decreasing air quality. They urged the Malaysian government to take legal action to curb environmental degradation and asked for a system-wide paradigm shift.
Along with the global messages “There is no planet B” and “System change not climate change,” banners like “Tree plantations are not real forests” and “Let us breathe freely again” drew attention to the main environmental degradation effects that Malaysians deal with on a daily basis.
The rally, led by Klima Action Malaysia (KAMY), drew the support of Greenpeace Malaysia and Amnesty International Malaysia.’
“We have been seeing there is a lot of climate pressure outside Malaysia and I think this is the best way to push for the climate agenda in Malaysia. We demand the government to take a more active stance on the the environmental and climate degradation in Malaysia, we want them to declare that this is a climate emergency,” said Nadia, cofounder of KAMY.
The group pleaded for the political and media silence on the climate emergency in Malaysia to break in order to increase public awareness about the issue.
“We want to increase the visibility of climate crisis in Asian countries and the Global South with a focus from Malaysia. This is a time to show that climate crisis is not only about icebergs, glaciers, it’s also about the forest fires. It’s really important because there is a lot of haze, the pollution that we are breathing right now is simply poison and this has been going on for the past 36 years and this is the climate crisis, the climate reality that we are facing now. It’s not the future, it’s right now,” she added.
For more than a month, parts of peninsular Malaysia and Borneo have been shrouded in haze from open burning in the region. Most of it comes from peat and palm oil plantations and forests burning in Indonesia. The burning has sparked intergovernmental tensions, with Malaysia accusing Indonesia of transboundary pollution. Indonesia has denied full responsibility for the issue, but also stressed that it is working to manage the fires.
In an effort to stop the burning, Indonesia deployed more than 9,000 people to fight the fires which are still raging on the islands of Sumatra and Borneo. On Friday, September 20, the total number of hotspots in Indonesia increased to 5,086 from 4,077 on Thursday, according to data from the Indonesian Disaster Mitigation Agency.
Kuala Lumpur has been in the top five most polluted cities in the world over the last two weeks, according to the Swiss live API update website AirVisual. With API readings over the 200 “very unhealthy” limit, schools were closed last Thursday and Friday all around Kuala Lumpur and the neighboring regions.
The situation is expected to be relieved in the following weeks with the arrival of the monsoon season that would end the months of extended drought caused by El Nino weather pattern.
Alexandra Radu is a photojournalist based in Kuala Lumpur. Her portfolio is available here.