×

Our award-winning reporting has moved

Context provides news and analysis on three of the world’s most critical issues:

climate change, the impact of technology on society, and inclusive economies.

From flying toilets to 'froggers' - Kenya struggles with slum waste

by Reuters
Friday, 8 March 2019 14:00 GMT

Kenyan 'froggers' slum dwellers Godfrey Ndalo and Patrick Osunda are assisted as they empty a metallic barrel of excrement from a pit latrine into a manhole in Kibera slum within Nairobi, Kenya February 24, 2019. Picture taken February 24, 2019. REUTERS/Njeri Mwangi

Image Caption and Rights Information

Once infamous for its so-called 'flying toilets' Kenya has seen long-drop latrines mushroom in the past decade after international charities and local businessmen funded their construction

(Adds comment by community co-ordinator)

By Hereward Holland

NAIROBI, March 8 (Reuters) - Most of Patrick 'Moreno' Osunda's neighbours curse when the rains make the latrines overflow. For him, it's the smell of money.

Osunda is part of a small army, known as "froggers", emptying a growing number of long-drop toilets, or pit latrines, in Kibera, a rust-roofed informal settlement in Nairobi.

Once infamous for its so-called 'flying toilets' - where residents would relieve themselves into plastic bags then hurl them out the door - Kenya has seen long-drop latrines mushroom in the past decade after international charities and local businessmen funded their construction.

"It has helped reduce the number of people using flying toilets," said Pascal Kipkemboi, a community co-ordinator in Kibera.

They usually charge between five and 10 shillings (5-10 cents) per use.

But while the charities tend to use sewage trucks - nicknamed "honeysuckers" - to empty their pits, some privately-run toilets rely on men like Osunda.

He hauls on a thin piece of rope to bring up the faecal soup in an old cooking-oil tin, then pours it into buckets before decanting it into an oil drum mounted on wheels.

Then he empties it into a tributary of the Nairobi River, which meanders through tree-lined neighbourhoods before traversing the khaki-coloured plains of Tsavo National Park and emptying into the Indian Ocean.

"If we didn't do this, the situation in Kibera would be much worse because there are no sewers. It would be a disaster," he said.

DEADLY DISEASES

Globally, almost 80 percent of the world's waste water flows back into the ecosystem without proper treatment, meaning almost a quarter of people drink water contaminated with human waste, United Nations Water says.

That incubates deadly diseases, including cholera, dysentery, typhoid and polio. Pollution is one of the key themes at a United Nations environmental conference hosted by Kenya next week.

Osunda has never been sick in his 30 years of work, he said proudly. Charities once gave his three-man crew gumboots, gloves and overalls. But the equipment wore out and the foreigners went home, so these days he buys the gloves himself.

Usually he makes 300 shillings ($3), but when it rains froggers can earn 1,000 Kenyan shillings ($10) a day, more than double the average wage, according to 2017 World Bank data.

More than half of Kenya's urban population live in unplanned settlements like Kibera, the World Bank says. The warren of narrow dirt-paved alleys is home to at least 250,000 souls.

Osunda and his colleagues perform a social service, but they are no substitute for proper waste management, said Riccardo Zennaro, a programme officer for wastewater management at the United Nations Environment Program.

"They contribute to resolving the issue at a very local scale. However ... they are not really the solution," Zennaro said. "They are actually part of the challenge." (Editing by Katharine Houreld and Gareth Jones)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

-->