September 11, 2011
Kuala Lumpur. Malaysia has complained to Indonesia about land-clearing fires in the neighboring country that have led to a blanket of pollution and poor air quality.
Environment Minister Douglas Uggah Embas sent a letter to his Indonesian counterpart on Friday about hundreds of suspected fires on Sumatra island, national news agency Bernama reported.
Indonesia's government has outlawed land-clearing by fire but weak law enforcement means the ban is largely ignored, and pollution regularly blankets the region.
Air quality on Friday dropped to a level deemed "unhealthy" in one area of Negeri Sembilan state, south of the capital Kuala Lumpur.
Though conditions improved on Saturday, some 60 percent of the country recorded "moderate" pollution.Uggah Embas said Indonesia had improved efforts to tackle the problem since 2005 when parts of one Malaysian state experienced pollution at highly dangerous levels.
He is expected to meet his counterpart, Gusti Muhammad Hatta, at an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) gathering in Bangkok on September 18.
And he said Malaysia would push for the setting up of a regional fire fighting squad to tackle haze-related fires in ASEAN member countries.
"We will push for this unit because we need quick deployment should any member country require such assistance," he was quoted as saying.
His aides could not immediately comment on the Bernama report.
Singapore also previously expressed concern that haze from the forest fires in the Riau province of Sumatra will affect the Formula 1 Grand Prix that the city state is scheduled to host later this month.
Agence France-Presse