Balkan air pollution crisis threatens public health, EU membership goals


  • World
  • Thursday, 23 Jan 2025

Smoke rises from the coal-fired power plant in Obilic, Kosovo January 13, 2025. REUTERS/Valdrin Xhemaj

OBILIC, Kosovo/BELGRADE (Reuters) - For 30 years, Shemsi Gara operated a giant digger in a Kosovo coal mine, churning up toxic dust that covered his face and got into his airways. Home life wasn't much better: the power plants that the mine supplies constantly spew fumes over his village.

Gara died on Sunday aged 55 after three years of treatment failed to contain his lung cancer. In his final days, unable to walk, he lay on a couch at home, gaunt and in pain, as a machine pumped oxygen into his dying body.

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