Malaysia closes hundreds of schools as haze hits unhealthy level

Hundreds of schools in Malaysia have been forced to close due to poor air quality, blamed on smoke drifting in from forest fires in neighbouring Indonesia.
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Chairman of Seraman state’s committee on education, entrepreneurship, industrialisation, investment and human capital Mohamad Rafie Abd Malek said the Air Pollution Index (API) in Port Dickson district reached unhealthy level of 203 at 6 am on September 16.

Haze blankets the sky along the Federal Highway near Shah Alam in Malaysia (Photo: Bernama)
Haze blankets the sky along the Federal Highway near Shah Alam in Malaysia (Photo: Bernama)

The committee decided to close 50 primary and 15 secondary schools in the district from September 17 to ensure safety for both teachers and students.

Meanwhile, a total of 138 schools in Selangor state were ordered to close on September 17 due to the ongoing haze situation. The Education Ministry said the closure would affect nearly 180,000 students in the districts of Sepang, Hulu Langat, Klang and Petaling Perdana.

As many as 25 schools in Putrajaya were also forced to suspend classes on September 17 as the API reading exceeded 200.

Air Pollutant Index (API) reading of between 0 and 50 is categorized as good, 51 to 100 moderate, 101 to 200 unhealthy, 201 to 300 very unhealthy, and above 300 hazardous.

Last week, hundreds of schools in Malaysia were closed due to impact of smoke from Indonesia’s forest fires. Many areas, including Kuala Lumpur, have been covered in haze, affecting local people’s health.

In recent years, forest fires in Indonesia have caused trans-boundary haze in Brunei, Malaysia and Singapore.

VNA

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