Categories: World

Indonesia denies responsibility for haze in Malaysia amid cross-border air quality concerns

close Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for October 6

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

Indonesia denied Friday that forest and peat fires on Sumatra and Borneo islands were causing the haze in Malaysia, after the neighboring government sent a letter complaining about the air quality and asking to work together to deal with the fires.

Forest and peat fires are an annual problem in Indonesia that strains relations with neighboring countries. In recent years, smoke from the fires has blanketed parts of Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia and southern Thailand.

Some parts of Malaysia said they experienced smoke from the Indonesian fires since last week, but the Indonesian government denied its fires are the cause.

“Until now there is no transboundary haze. No cross-border smoke. I don’t know what basis Malaysia uses to make these statements,” Siti Nurbaya Bakar, Indonesian Environment and Forestry minister, told The Associated Press.

Malaysia’s capital, Kuala Lumpur, and Kuching, one of its cities on Borneo island, were recently ranked as among the world’s top five most polluted cities by IQAir, a Swiss air quality technology company.

5 PAPUAN INDEPENDENCE FIGHTERS KILLED IN CLASH WITH SECURITY FORCES IN INDONESIA’S PAPUA REGION

Indonesia has denied its fires are causing the blankets of haze in neighboring Malaysia.  (Fox News)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

There are more than 1,900 recorded hotspots on Sumatra, mostly in South Sumatra province, according to the data from Indonesia’s Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency. On Monday, the local government in South Sumatra asked residents to work from home and schools to go online amid a blanket of haze. Hundreds of forest fires in South Kalimantan province in Borneo island made the smoke haze even more widespread, especially during the last week. The local government has also called the students to do online learning as the air quality is unhealthy.

Indonesian authorities have so far ignored Malaysia’s request.

Bakar provided government data showing that, while it fluctuates, air quality in the regions where the peat and forest fires were found in the past week were getting better.

“We are still working to handle the forest and land fires in Borneo and Sumatra islands as well as possible. And the picture of the situation on the ground is getting better,” she said, adding that rain was aiding the process in multiple areas, including through government rain-seeding efforts.

Share

Recent Posts

More details emerge about Florida State University shooting suspect Phoenix Ikner as motive remains a mystery

close Video Sheriff says deputy's son suspected of killing two in Florida State campus shooting…

1 hour ago

Radical activist who fueled Cori Bush’s campaigns emerges as spokesperson for track star’s murder suspect

FIRST ON FOX: A spokesperson for the family of the 17-year-old boy accused of stabbing…

1 hour ago

ICE and DOGE seek sensitive data in crackdown on illegal immigration, waste: report

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials and the U.S. DOGE Service are reportedly looking to…

1 hour ago

ICE arrests over 200 illegal aliens in New York City’s ‘most crime-infested neighborhoods’

ICE and several federal law enforcement agencies arrested over 200 illegal aliens in an "enhanced…

1 hour ago

HHS probing hospital over firing of nurse who blew whistle on minors getting gender treatments

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is probing "a major pediatric teaching hospital"…

3 hours ago

Federal judge temporarily restricts DOGE access to personalized Social Security data

A federal judge in Baltimore issued a preliminary injunction Thursday restricting the Department of Government…

3 hours ago