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Their lives are already difficult. A ragpicker named Munari and his five illiterate sons collect trash from about 1,700 homes, and must spend much of their earnings on bribes and rent. They live in a cluster of shelters made from plastic sheeting and corrugated metal near a 70-acre (28-hectare) public landfill site. "The work is hard and life tough," said Munari, sitting on a small rope bed in front of his hut. But he added that life is better here than it was in his former home in the impoverished state of Bihar. The ragpickers live a hazy legal existence. They pay bribes for the right to collect the city's garbage, doing the work that the city's 30,000 official garbage collectors are supposed to do, but don't, confident that the government won't bother to try to fire them. Akbar's home and office is in a brick building surrounded by piles of paper, plastic and glass 10 feet high (3 meters high). He points to a rusty tricycle loaded with plastic bottles and grins with the brashness of a Wall Street broker. Trash is "like our gold," he said. "The prices are changing all the time, so we have to monitor the situation and cash in at the peak." While he enjoys his smartphone and clean clothes, he doesn't know what he or the thousands of other residents of the poor Seemapuri neighborhood will do if the new plants go into operation. "Recycling is what 70 to 80 percent of the residents do. We have nowhere else to go," he said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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