Officials Fined Over Illegal Dumps in Atyrau Region
Illustration: elements.envato.com
Prosecutors in Zhylyoi district found more than 50 illegal dumping sites. After the inspection, seven local akims were fined, Orda.kz reports.
The district prosecutor’s office analyzed compliance with environmental legislation and inspected local territories. Prosecutors found 62 illegal dumps across 51 sites.
The dumps were recorded in Kulsary, the village of Zhana-Karaton and five rural districts: Koschagyl, Zhem, Akkiztogai, Kara-Arna and Maikomgen.
The akims of Kulsary, Zhana-Karaton and the five rural districts received administrative fines. The total amount was 227,000 tenge.
District services are also monitoring cleanliness through work with residents. Since the beginning of the year, 495 local residents have been fined for violating improvement rules.
Original author: Eva Golovintseva
Read also:
Latest news
- Officials Fined Over Illegal Dumps in Atyrau Region
- Astana to Reward Residents for Reporting Offenses
- Kazakhstan Officially Licenses Crypto Exchange Operator for the First Time
- More Than 200,000 People in Kazakhstan Legally Own Weapons
- Kazakhstan Builds Greenhouses To End Winter Vegetable Shortages
- Kazakhstan’s State Oil Company And China’s CNPC Plan Refinery Expansion
- Kazakhstan And Turkey Sign Nuclear Energy Cooperation Deal
- Kazakhstan Sets Campaign Dates For Kurultai Election
- Kazakhstan Tightens Control Over Fuel Prices
- Almaty Metro Bans Electric Scooters, Bikes And Skateboards
- Kazakhstan Ready To Supply Gasoline To Russia On Mutually Beneficial Terms
- Banks in Kazakhstan and Other EAEU Countries Tighten Rules on Cash Ruble Deposits
- Kazakh Billionaire Sues Guinea Over Bauxite Mining License
- Kazakhstan May Become Founding Member of New International AI Organization
- New Astana Airport Construction To Begin Next Year
- Kazakhstan’s New Parliament Enters Election Mode
- Kazakhstani Schools To Make Constitution Classes Mandatory
- Astana Fines 21 Women For Wearing Niqabs In Public
- U.S. Investment In Kazakhstan Could Rise To $137 Billion
- Kazakhstan To Create Digital Family Profiles With Income And Expense Data