Saturday 22 September 2012

[wanabidii] Re: (VVM Forum) Kenyan rubbish dump offers little money for much misery

A dump does not belong in the city. It not only endagers the health of
the people around, it also infiltrates the underground water thus
affects the quality of borehole water around Nairobi. A dump should be
located at least 20 km away from the city boundaries, unless
constructed using modern technology.

The major concern with dumps in the West is the infiltration into
ground water. As garbage rots and chemicals such as in used batteries
leech out, they make their way into the ground water.

Courage



On 9/22/12, odhiambo okecth <komarockswatch@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
> This is a real tragedy; 50 Years into our Independence; Oto
>
>
> Campaigners want to close a dump in Nairobi that spreads disease, but
> thousands of scavengers rely on it for survival
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Clar Ni Chonghaile
>
>
> guardian.co.uk,
> Tuesday 18 September 2012 15.14 BST
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Men and women pick
> through a rubbish truck at Dandora dump, Nairobi, in search of anything
> they can sell on or take home to use. Photograph: Clar Ni Chonghaile
>
>
>
> A man with a sack slung over his shoulder trudges up a mountain
> of rotting rubbish, where Marabou storks perch like mournful sentinels.
> In the valley below, a woman pulls a jacket from the rubbish and holds
> it up, appraising it with a critical eye.At Nairobi's Dandora
> rubbish dump, the working day is in full swing. Men and women pick
> through a newly arrived truck, looking for plastic, food, clothes, paper
> and bottles – anything they can sell on or take home to use.Robert Ondika,
> 27, straightens from sifting through the rubbish with an iron hook. He has
> been working in Dandora, one of Africa's
> largest rubbish dumps, for three years and earns between 50 and 500
> Kenyan shillings a day (between $0.60 and $6). "We come here to earn our
> daily bread," he says in Kiswahili. "Here, we touch different things,
> we could step on something sharp. It is only God who is helping us
> here."For these foot soldiers in Nairobi's unregulated rubbish
> business, the work is perilous and the rewards paltry, to say nothing of
> the discomfort of spending the day in a smoky, stinking wasteland. But
> for those who live in the neighbourhoods around the dump, it offers
> survival.That is Dandora's paradox – it is source of life, but also of
> illness and, occasionally, death. In a report released on Tuesday, Concern
> Worldwide, Italian development group Cesvi and church group Exodus Kutoka
> say the dump is "one of the most flagrant violations of human rights" in
> Kenya.The report says the city council of Nairobi, local government
> departments and the National Environment Management Authority (Nema) bear
> legal responsibility for the hazardous living conditions in the slums
> nearby.The
> dump, which lies 8km (5 miles) from the city centre, was declared full
> in 2001, and since then campaigners, including Concern, have sought to
> have it decommissioned.The report, Trash and Tragedy: The Impact of Garbage
> on Human Rights in Nairobi City,
> says the rubbish had polluted the soil, water and air, affecting more
> than 200,000 people, including up to 10,000 who spend the day seeking
> treasure from it.Most of them do not wear gloves or masks and
> many suffer from respiratory ailments, such as asthma. Other conditions
> that have affected workers include anaemia, kidney problems, cancer and
> frequent miscarriages.A 2007 study
> by the United Nations Environment Programme found that at least half
> the children in surrounding neighbourhoods had heavy metal
> concentrations in their blood that exceed the minimum level set by the
> World Health Organisation. Some estimates say around half the workers on
> the dump are under 18.A site for a new dump was earmarked near
> Nairobi's international airport, but that idea stalled this year when
> the Kenya Airports Authority said birds attracted by the rubbish could
> endanger planes.The Trash and Tragedy report says many workers do not
> support plans to close the dump, where 850 tonnes of waste are deposited
> each day.Father
> John Webootsa, who lives nearby in Korogocho slum, understands this.
> "It brings money and it brings death," says the Comboni priest, who has
> campaigned for years to have the 30-acre dump relocated. He organises
> vocational training and loans for scavengers to help them escape."We
> believe this is not a life that human beings should live," he says.
> "Many [people] have died and others are dying. Others have been burned
> by the acid, the 'boilers' [contaminated industrial waste barrels] that
> are there. Beneath that garbage, there are boiling chemicals, and people
> may be burned if they step on them by accident."Korogocho, which
> means "crowded shoulder to shoulder" in Kiswahili, appears to have been
> forgotten by the government. On one of the narrow streets, pigs snuffle
> among piles of rubbish, just yards from the body of a dead dog.
> Webootsa says people here feel rejected by society and by the
> government. "Social amenities are not provided, the government is not
> here. We do not have a public health facility … there are only two
> schools, and they were built by us," he says.But the dump is a
> source of wealth and power for the men at the top of an informal cartel
> that runs the site. With no government control, there is plenty of room
> for gangsters to wield their influence. Visitors must organise and pay
> for "security" to walk around the site and to take photographs.The report
> says powerful business interests have rallied communities against the
> decommissioning process. "Most of the anti-decomissioning forces have
> deeply vested business interests that thrive in the prevailing chaos,"
> it says.The report argues that any solution requires a sea-change in
> Nairobi, a city of more than 3.5 million people where recycling
> is non-existent, or ad hoc. "Residents of Nairobi must take
> responsibility for their waste … a key step is to demand urgent delivery
> of a safe and comprehensive waste management system, with a functional
> sanitary landfill," the report says.Concern
> and its co-authors urge the government to use modern technology to
> isolate toxic waste in Dandora, and identify a site to build a sanitary
> landfill.Webootsa stresses that any solution must take into
> account the thousands working as scavengers. "They don't need the dump.
> They need the job," he says. "They don't need the rubbish. They will be
> happy to have a clean environment, they will be happy to breathe clean
> air, and of course, there has to be a proper livelihood."
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

--
Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

Kujiondoa Tuma Email kwenda
wanabidii+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com Utapata Email ya kudhibitisha ukishatuma

Disclaimer:
Everyone posting to this Forum bears the sole responsibility for any legal consequences of his or her postings, and hence statements and facts must be presented responsibly. Your continued membership signifies that you agree to this disclaimer and pledge to abide by our Rules and Guidelines.

0 comments:

Post a Comment