‘When a City of 40,000 People Gets Poisoned, They Don’t Care’

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On Sunday, Mr. Zhdanov was detained by the police and sentenced to 14 days of administrative arrest for hindering access to transport infrastructure by organizing an illegal rally.

The landfill crisis started in June, when residents of Balashikha, a large satellite town just outside Moscow, complained to President Vladimir V. Putin during his annual call-in show about the “unbearable” situation in their neighborhood, which stands 650 feet away from Kuchino, one of the largest landfill dumps in the region.

Mr. Putin, showing off his trademark Mr. Fix-It role, ordered the landfill closed. The government wanted to do so in 2021, allowing time to find and develop new locations to distribute Moscow’s waste, but Mr. Putin was relentless.

“Now listen to me,” Mr. Putin told Environment Minister Sergei Donskoy during a televised government meeting. “Close this landfill within a month.”

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Residents of Volokolamsk protesting outside the town hall on Sunday to demand the closing of the Yadrovo landfill.

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Artyom Geodakyan/TASS, via Getty Images

The landfill was closed, but the 1,000 or so truckloads of waste produced daily in Moscow had to go somewhere. The regional government distributed the extra waste among the few remaining landfills around Moscow, in some cases overwhelming their capacity. The one near Volokolamsk, in Yadrovo, has seen the lines of trucks in front of its gates increase by at least a quarter.

“In the first half of 2017, I received 80,000 tons of waste; in the second half I had twice as much,” said Maksim O. Konopko, one of the Yadrovo landfill’s owners. “If it weren’t for Kuchino, we would stay within our normal limits.”

In a landfill dump, the incoming waste — most of it consisting of rotting food — is buried with soil. The waste then brews inside, producing biogas, a combination of methane, carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulfide and other components. In the absence of a collection system, the accumulated gas eventually bursts through the soil and vents in large quantities into the surrounding area. The Yadrovo landfill does not have such a system, though the owner plans to install one with the help of a Dutch company.

Mr. Konopko said that he wanted to restrict the volume of waste he was receiving, but that he was getting angry phone calls, pressuring him to take more.

“Do you know what country we live in?” Mr. Konopko said, implying that these were orders he could not refuse.

Mr. Konopko denied accusations that he had a financial interest in handling as much garbage as he could, since he is paid about $2 per cubic meter, saying that the added revenues would be more than offset by the cost of the new gas reclamation system. Over all, the landfill representatives said they were just as much victims of this situation as anybody else.

That is debatable, given the apparent health effects, particularly for small children. Galina N. Dubrovskaya, a former accountant, said that her granddaughter, Uliana, had been a perfectly healthy child, but that this March the girl began to wake up at night suffering nausea, dizziness and headaches. These episodes seemed to coincide, she said, with the times when the landfill spewed stinking fumes.

At least 77 children were treated at the Volokolamsk hospital after one recent blast of fumes. The regional government denied that their symptoms had anything to do with the gas, and said no traces of it had been found in the children’s blood.

Local residents have disagreed vehemently. Shura Y. Antipov, whose daughter Vika was covered with large red spots, was told by doctors that the girl was suffering from some allergy and hinted at “external causes.” But they refused to link the spots to the landfill gases.

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Local residents waiting for test results at a hospital in Volokolamsk. Releases of toxic gases from a nearby landfill have made dozens of people, most of them children, turn to hospitals.

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Alexander Zemlianichenko/Associated Press

“At the beginning, doctors were pointing at the dump, but did not write anything down,” said Mr. Antipov, 25, who works in the construction industry. “Now they say, ‘Anything else but the landfill.’”

Experts say Russia’s waste problem is systemic and warrants complicated long-term solutions.

“If you want to fix a leaking faucet, perhaps you shouldn’t break the whole pipe with a sledgehammer,” Aleksei Kiselyov, the head of Greenpeace Russia’s toxics campaign, said of Mr. Putin’s decision to close the big landfill. “The whole waste landfill problem has become subject to populism.”

To solve the problem, Mr. Kiselyov said, the Russian government would need to do what it never likes doing: encourage grass-roots movements to propagate recycling among the population.

“We have all these grand ideas about making Russia great, but we cannot do some fundamental things,” he said.

So far, the Kremlin has been characteristically reluctant to cover the problem on state-run television channels, enraging people in Volokolamsk.

“The only things you hear are Ukraine and Syria, Ukraine and Syria,” said Lidiya L. Ivanova, whose teenage grandson had his hands covered in eczema “as though he were wearing gloves.”

“Why they never cover our own, Russian problems?” said Ms. Ivanova, 59.

The regional government has announced that it will close the Yadrovo landfill by the middle of this month and start its reclamation. The problem is that the Moscow waste will then be transferred to other landfills, and people are already protesting against the smell in other cities around the capital.

“You can move the waste from one pocket to another, but this doesn’t solve the problem,” said Aleskandr Zakondyrin, a member of the political party Green Alliance.

Deni Tsugayev, 10, said he felt nauseated every time his mother opened up the balcony door at night. When they went to the hospital, an official told them he was faking the sickness.

Last week, he went to the main square with his mother to protest. He carried a poster saying: “There are children in Syria, there are children in Ukraine! Who am I? I am only 10 and I want to live.”

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Source : Nytimes