The second city in the United Kingdom is in the fifth week of a garbage strike, and residents of Birmingham now have a second unpleasant problem: rats pulled by lots of unclear waste. The AP reports that the city is in the midst of a garbage crisis due to a prolonged strike by garbage collectors. Initiated by members of the Union Unit, he started on March 11 on the frustration of certain eliminated jobs and salary reductions.
The heaps of growing waste have part of the city, which house more than a million residents, unmanageable and have attracted rats, complain about residents. “As much as cats do not pursue them,” said a resident New York Times. As for the size of these lots, the Times said there were around 17,000 tonnes of waste stacked in the streets a week ago. The municipal council said it was a major incident in order to obtain access to Birmingham to additional government and regional resources. THE Times Notes a collection of garbage occurs and the city center has been largely maintained.
Naeem Yousef, a premises, described by trying to make an appointment to delete waste as “like winning a lottery”. Indeed, the sequences of Drons AP notes taken by the BBC last week showed a wait for a mile long to enter a single discharge site. “You can see the juice pouring bags on the road,” said Yousef. “It stinks.” Birmingham experienced a similar waste crisis in 2017; The one who lasted seven weeks. (This content was created using AI. Read our AI policy.)