Plastic Waste Chokes Da Loc Beach in Vietnam

A seashore littered with plastic waste. (Getty Images)
A seashore littered with plastic waste. (Getty Images)
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Plastic Waste Chokes Da Loc Beach in Vietnam

A seashore littered with plastic waste. (Getty Images)
A seashore littered with plastic waste. (Getty Images)

Sands of the long tree-lined beach of Da Loc are covered with plastic waste that were belched out of an ocean that is also littered with blue plastic bags.

Just south of the capital Hanoi, the once-peaceful and clean beach of Da Loc in Vietnam’s Thanh Hoa province has been slowly suffocating under the weight of plastic waste for decades.

Pham Thi Lai, 60, a local seafood processor said: “They put everything in a plastic bag. If they’re preserving shrimp or preserving fish, they put it in a plastic bag,”

“When they finish they just throw the bags into the ocean. The trash floats to wherever the sea level rises,” she said according to Reuters.

Globally, eight million tons of plastic is dumped into the ocean every year, killing marine life and entering the human food chain, said the UN Environment Program.

The latest example was a pilot whale that died in Thailand with some 80 pieces of plastic rubbish found in its stomach.

World Environment Day on Tuesday focused on beating plastic pollution, with a call for citizens, companies and civil society groups to organize the “biggest-ever worldwide cleanup”.

On Monday, 41 embassies and international organizations in Vietnam signed a pledge to combat plastic pollution in the country.

Canadian ambassador Ping Kitnikone said in a statement: “As international partners, we have the privilege to work in Vietnam, and have a collective responsibility to reduce our plastic footprint in this beautiful country.”

Ngo Ngoc Dinh, head of Da Loc People’s Committee said: “Water rises and falls every day, how can we clean it all? We can’t escape it, we have to solve it ourselves.”



Prince William Says Visit With Diana to Homeless Shelter Was Eye-Opener

This handout photograph released by Kensington Palace on October 25, 2024, shows Britain's Princess Diana (2R) with her 11-year-old son William (L), now Britain's Prince William, Prince of Wales in the kitchens during one of his first visits to homelessness charity, The Passage in London, taken on December 14, 1993.. (Photo by THE PASSAGE / AFP)
This handout photograph released by Kensington Palace on October 25, 2024, shows Britain's Princess Diana (2R) with her 11-year-old son William (L), now Britain's Prince William, Prince of Wales in the kitchens during one of his first visits to homelessness charity, The Passage in London, taken on December 14, 1993.. (Photo by THE PASSAGE / AFP)
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Prince William Says Visit With Diana to Homeless Shelter Was Eye-Opener

This handout photograph released by Kensington Palace on October 25, 2024, shows Britain's Princess Diana (2R) with her 11-year-old son William (L), now Britain's Prince William, Prince of Wales in the kitchens during one of his first visits to homelessness charity, The Passage in London, taken on December 14, 1993.. (Photo by THE PASSAGE / AFP)
This handout photograph released by Kensington Palace on October 25, 2024, shows Britain's Princess Diana (2R) with her 11-year-old son William (L), now Britain's Prince William, Prince of Wales in the kitchens during one of his first visits to homelessness charity, The Passage in London, taken on December 14, 1993.. (Photo by THE PASSAGE / AFP)

Prince William has recalled how his late mother Princess Diana took him to a shelter for homeless people when he was just 11 years old, saying how the visit opened his eyes to how others lived a different life to him.
In an extract from a documentary about his efforts to end homelessness to be broadcast this week, the heir to the British throne said how Diana introduced him and his younger brother Prince Harry to the cause as part of her determination to raise wider awareness of social issues from AIDS to mental health, Reuters said.
"I'd never been to anything like that before, and I was a bit anxious as to what to expect. My mother went about her usual part of making everyone feel relaxed and having a laugh and joking with everyone," William said of the 1993 visit to The Passage charity in London.
Last June, the elder son of King Charles launched a five-year project "Homewards" which he said was inspired by Diana.
Homeless charities say it is hard to know exactly how many people are living on the streets but statistics released this month said 178,560 households were assessed as homeless in England in 2023-24, up 12.3% on the year before.
In focusing on homelessness, William said he was "desperately trying to help people who are in need, and I see that as part of my role".
He recalled during his visit to The Passage playing chess and chatting with those there.
"That's when it informed me that there are other people out there who don't have the same life as you do," he says in the documentary. "When you're quite small ... you just think life is what you see in front of you. You don't really have concept to look elsewhere.
"And it's when you meet people that I did then who put a different perspective in your head and say ... I was living on the street last night."
The full ITV documentary, "Prince William: We Can End Homelessness", will be shown on Oct. 30 and 31.