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'Pity the cleaners': Tampines, Sengkang residents miffed after devotees leave behind joss paper on grass patch during Hungry Ghost Festival

'Pity the cleaners': Tampines, Sengkang residents miffed after devotees leave behind joss paper on grass patch during Hungry Ghost Festival
Devotees of the Hungry Ghost Festival have apparently failed to clean up the joss paper from their burnt offerings at Tampines, Sengkang.
PHOTO: Facebook/Complaint Singapore

Devotees of the Hungry Ghost Festival have drawn the ire of residents in Tampines after they apparently failed to clean up the joss paper from their burnt offerings.  

Many Taoists and Buddhists in Singapore observe the seventh month of the lunar calendar by burning joss paper and making offerings to the deceased.

On Thursday (Aug 17), a Facebook user posted a picture of the scene at a grass patch in Tampines. It showed a mess of joss paper scattered around the designated burner.

They also haphazardly left the joss sticks in between the concrete drainage covers.

"Pity the cleaners this morning, even the plastic they didn't throw," read the photo caption.

One Facebook user commented that their six-year-old child had asked them why things were so messy.

Another commenter called the behaviour "irresponsible" and said that the mess in their neighbourhood, Sengkang, was even worse.

Another user included a hashtag for the National Environment Agency in their comment, while pointing out that such actions constituted to littering. 

ALSO READ: 'Distributing' or littering? Video of man tossing joss paper into the air sparks debate again

This article was first published in The New Paper. Permission required for reproduction.

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