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Poor
quality garbage tells a tale
IRIN News
June 28, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=72983
What people discard tells
you something about their level of wellbeing: for the garbage collectors
who trawl through the trash at the municipal dumpsite in Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe's second city, things have never been so bad.
The roar of a refuse
collection truck approaching the dumpsite on the outskirts of the
southern city triggers a newfound desperation among the rubbish
recyclers trying to make a living from other people's leftovers.
At the entrance gate
two men have vaulted onto the top of the truck, while another hangs
precariously from its tailgate, their mouths stuffed with rags to
avoid the suffocating dust as best they can. Two others stand guard
at the gate to screen encroaching newcomers.
"We just don't allow
anyone to come into our territory because there is much less to
go around for everyone," says one of the guards, scanning an
expectant group milling near the entrance.
Tenjiwe Sihlalo, 40,
wades through the mashed garbage, trying to keep pace with the slow-moving
truck, ignoring the grit and dirt it has churned up. "Good
garbage is hard to come by these days, unlike in the past, when
we could get quality throwaways," she says.
As the truck tips out
its load, the scavengers rush forward, waving away the plumes of
dust, trying to quickly identify anything of value for resale. "You
hardly find enough trash of reasonable quality," complains
52-year-old Gibson Hlongwane.
The manufacturing firms
that have survived Zimbabwe's seven-year recession have been conserving
packaging - bad news for the dumpsite entrepreneurs.
Economists estimate that
most firms are operating at between 60 percent and 70 percent below
capacity in a long-running foreign currency crisis that has squeezed
imports of raw materials and equipment spare parts. Just two out
of 10 Zimbabweans have formal jobs, while inflation, currently around
4,000 percent, could hit over a million percent by the end of the
year.
Hlongwane has been recycling
garbage for the past five years, and says times have never been
this tough. "It appears manufacturers no longer discard cartons
and cardboard boxes that used to fetch us good money," he comments,
picking through scraps of cardboard.
"Either that or
the workers at the factories first go through the material that
has to be thrown away for what they can retrieve for recycling before
dumping the worst for us."
The erratic collection
of garbage by the city council from Bulawayo's wealthier suburbs
has not helped.
"We used to get
second-hand clothes and shoes thrown away by the residents. Now
we rarely do," Sihlalo says, inching towards the base of the
rubbish dump to prize out what looks like a broken sandal before
picking up her bag and heading for an open space to sort out her
day's finds.
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