Polluted area Sewage cross-flow garbage is all over the ground, and the developer will leave after seeing it, and residents are helpless
And in this regard, Vienna, Austria, has earned the title of the most livable in the world for its good air and air. However, if you want to say the worst one, Delhi, the capital of India, is definitely one of them.
Delhi is the dirtiest area in the world, the slum of Delhi, India's proud "City of Monuments", located in the Yamuna River basin, a tributary of the Ganges River, so filthy that even developers would be deterred by the cost of two to five times more.
The U.S. air quality monitoring network (AirVisual) has published a report on seven of the world's top 10 dirtiest cities in India, while Delhi is the world's No. 1 slum in Vicananda, which is polluted by "land, sea and air" in all directions, from the air to the ground to the underground.
There are more than one slum in Delhi, from the largest slum in the world (over 10 million) to the most controversial slum, with more than 500 slums in more than 120 and a total of 90 million slums. Those slums of all sizes, no water pipes, no sewers, no toilets, no garbage cans.
It's easier said than done to pick out the dirtiest neighborhood in the world, but it's actually not easy, with dirty sewers and sewers everywhere, and even the sewers and sewers are covered with thick garbage. According to the statistics released by the WHO, India has the highest help in Asia in terms of health.
In the latest report from the World Health Organization in 2019, only one-third of India's population has access to health care, and tens of millions of Indians still need to carry water trucks once a day and wait in line for more than 2,000 kilometers to drinkOne toilet for 800 people, one bathroom for 1,100 people (one bathroom for 2,500 people).
Water scarcity is no longer news in India, where people have long relied on groundwater extraction. In 2018, Delhi consumed 3900 million cubic meters, more than 3 percent of the amount of natural supplementation100 million cubic meters, which has led 20 Indian cities, including Delhi, to issue a warning that "groundwater depth will be zero by 2020".
Scientists at the World Health Organization are also worried about two other things: First, Delhi's groundwater is decreasing every year, from more than 40 metres in 2000 to more than 80 metres now. Even at depths of more than 80 metres, the microbial content in the water is growing at a rate of 60 per cent, and in slums it is up to 300 per cent.
Just a wall away from the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi, the Vikananda slum covers an area of 0With 21 square kilometres and more than 53,000 permanent residents, the health situation is much smaller than that of Dahavi's slums, but health experts have taken the health sector by surprise: not a single part of the slum is clean, and there is unpleasant smell of waste everywhere.
Vikananda's slum is inseparable from the low level of garbage disposal in Delhi, India, which was originally a piece of land used by wealthy Indians to build houses, but the U.S. Embassy was not allowed to start construction on the grounds of "safety", and finally it was occupied by poor people who picked up rubbish, so Delhi also won the title of "garbage city".
Since the end of the last century, most of Delhi's homeless poor people who live on "** garbage" have flocked to Vikananda and sent the city's garbage to the slums for screening, many of whom are picking up rotten vegetables and fish in the bazaar, so that the residents of Delhi have stayed away from Vikananda.
Until then, the sifted waste would be burned by the poor, and the U.S. Embassy was forced to stop burning because it couldn't stand the gas. As time went on, more and more garbage was trampled by the poor, creating a road, something that everyone was Xi to doing, as if the city was like that.
The Indian company quickly targeted Vikananda and gradually developed a complete industrial chain of factory-controlled waste recycling. So, even if the developer comes, they won't go to Vikananda to dig three feet of land, because the land there is all garbage.
When the American writer Nichole visited the slums of Vikananda in Delhi, India, she saw a group of children smiling and greeting her while eating, and she said with tears in her eyes: "In my life's journey, I have never seen anything that could push me into such a desperate situation, and it was the first time in my life that I passed through Vikananda, in the heart of the Indian capital."
In her **, children who live in the dirtiest neighborhoods in the world, their lives are arranged because they are born in the slums, so they do not enjoy the happiness they deserve, especially the boys who are born in the slums, even more so.