Cambodian officials want the US and Canada to leave their trash at home — and they are sending a whopping 1,600 tons of plastic waste back to where it came from, according to a new report.

Eighty-three shipping containers full of trash were discovered Tuesday at Sihanoukville, Cambodia’s main port — and the southeast Asian country has had enough, according to The Guardian.

“Cambodia is not a dustbin where foreign countries can dispose of out-of-date e-waste, and the government also opposes any import of plastic waste and lubricants to be recycled in this country,” Neth Pheaktra, a spokesman for the country’s environment minister, told the paper.

Seventy of the containers were shipped from the US and 13 came from Canada, Pheaktra said — noting that both countries are major exporters of such waste.

A government committee is digging into how and why the containers ended up in Cambodia — and any company determined to be involved would be fined and brought to court, according to the report.

In a Facebook post, Preap Kol, executive director of Transparency International Cambodia, blasted the decision to dump the waste in his country as a “serious insult.”

Just last week, Cambodian prime minister Hun Sen had declared that the country is not a dumping ground for any type of waste, and forbids imports of plastic waste or other recyclables, according to the report.

The country has its own share of issues with plastic waste generated domestically, the paper reported.