How to deal with Kibera's 'flying toilets'

Kurzweil

JF-Expert Member
May 25, 2011
6,622
8,410
VIDEO: Ukitembelea kitongoji cha Kibera kilichopo Jijini Nairobi nchini Kenya unashauriwa usikanyage mfuko wowote wa 'Plastic' ulio pembezoni mwa barabara au katika makazi ya watu.

- Hali hii inasababishwa na ukweli kuwa wakazi wa eneo hilo kuwa na utamaduni wa kujisaidia haja kubwa katika mifuko hiyo na kisha kuitupa nje ya makazi yao mtindo maarugu kama '' flying toilets'' Vyoo vinavyo paa.

- Aidha tabia hii inathibitisha kuwa katika eneo la Kibera ambako wanaishi watu wa hali ya chini hakuna mfumo mzuri wa maji taka na ukosefu wa vyoo katika makazi ya watu.




Nairobi, Kenya
- Wherever you walk in Kibera, the Kenyan capital's biggest slum, there's one golden rule that must always be observed, local resident Abdul Abdallah says.

"Don't step on any plastic or paper bag you see on the road."

Among the endless piles of rubbish that line Kibera's streets are what are known as "flying toilets".

"People poo in the bags at night, and they tie it and throw it and throw it away," Abdallah tells Al Jazeera.

The flying toilets are a symptom of Kibera's lack of a proper sewage system.

Hardly any in this impoverished corner of Nairobi has the luxury of a toilet inside their home. Some have an outdoor toilet, shared between multiple dwellings, but these are simple pit latrines that need to be emptied - usually into the open sewers outside.

"You remove it from your face and put it to another person's face," Harun Wainaina, another local resident, says with a bitter laugh.

Inside his compact - but neat and tidy - home, his two children play video games. He says he's had to take them to the doctor on more than one occasion to treat diseases they picked up after playing in the streets.

"If you go to the hospital, you will find many cases like this," Wainaina tells Al Jazeera. "This is a crisis."

Al Jazeera spent time with several of Kibera's residents, examining the effect of the slum's waste crisis and the innovative solutions some locals have developed to tackle the problem. Watch the video at the top to find out more.
 
VIDEO: Ukitembelea kitongoji cha Kibera kilichopo Jijini Nairobi nchini Kenya unashauriwa usikanyage mfuko wowote wa 'Plastic' ulio pembezoni mwa barabara au katika makazi ya watu.

- Hali hii inasababishwa na ukweli kuwa wakazi wa eneo hilo kuwa na utamaduni wa kujisaidia haja kubwa katika mifuko hiyo na kisha kuitupa nje ya makazi yao mtindo maarugu kama '' flying toilets'' Vyoo vinavyo paa.

- Aidha tabia hii inathibitisha kuwa katika eneo la Kibera ambako wanaishi watu wa hali ya chini hakuna mfumo mzuri wa maji taka na ukosefu wa vyoo katika makazi ya watu.




Nairobi, Kenya
- Wherever you walk in Kibera, the Kenyan capital's biggest slum, there's one golden rule that must always be observed, local resident Abdul Abdallah says.

"Don't step on any plastic or paper bag you see on the road."

Among the endless piles of rubbish that line Kibera's streets are what are known as "flying toilets".

"People poo in the bags at night, and they tie it and throw it and throw it away," Abdallah tells Al Jazeera.

The flying toilets are a symptom of Kibera's lack of a proper sewage system.

Hardly any in this impoverished corner of Nairobi has the luxury of a toilet inside their home. Some have an outdoor toilet, shared between multiple dwellings, but these are simple pit latrines that need to be emptied - usually into the open sewers outside.

"You remove it from your face and put it to another person's face," Harun Wainaina, another local resident, says with a bitter laugh.

Inside his compact - but neat and tidy - home, his two children play video games. He says he's had to take them to the doctor on more than one occasion to treat diseases they picked up after playing in the streets.

"If you go to the hospital, you will find many cases like this," Wainaina tells Al Jazeera. "This is a crisis."

Al Jazeera spent time with several of Kibera's residents, examining the effect of the slum's waste crisis and the innovative solutions some locals have developed to tackle the problem. Watch the video at the top to find out more.

Kenya's Kibera slum gets a revamp


_81131456_img_3251.jpg


Kibera, the Kenyan slum infamous for its overcrowding, poverty and lack of sanitation, is getting a major revamp with some modern facilities.

Founded more than 100 years ago, it is said to be home to around a fifth of Nairobi's population and yet has not featured in any government plans - until recently.

Fifteen densely populated villages make up this slum. We're in Mashimoni, home to mud huts and tin shacks.

The only formal structure here is a recently built toilet.

But Boniface Ouma has lived in Kibera for 37 years and says the changes are difficult to miss.

We need long-term solutions and some of the projects like the vegetable projects and the fish ponds are not really going to be sustainable in the long run
Boniface Ouma, Kibera resident
There are now tarred roads, mobile clinics and police stations made from shipping containers, working street lights and even free Wifi throughout the slum.

One of the biggest issues has always been housing.

The residents do not have title deeds, so technically the land still belongs to the government.

That does not stop descendents of the original residents, largely from the Nubian community, from sub-letting their tin shacks to more recent arrivals.

Now, however, the government is building permanent houses, with proper sanitation.

Anne Waiguru, the minister of planning and devolution, told the BBC: "We want these new houses to become the minimum standard for the people of Kibera."

Around 50% of those Kibera residents who have jobs are employed in nearby Nairobi, usually as cheap unskilled labour.

However, unemployment is still high, especially among the youth.


_81131930_dscf2745.jpg


Kenya's Kibera slum gets a revamp - BBC News
 
Some of the latest projects in Kibera...............

19064975835_188a49398c.jpg


18023301_401.jpg


Fig-5-Biogas-toilet-in-Kibera-slum-Kenya.jpg


2275913_303.jpg


images


The flying toilets are becoming the things of the past.;
 
Afu kenya wanatuita sisi maskini kweli? Tanzania hatuna sehemu chafu dizaini hii na haina raia wachafu kwa kiwango ichi daaah..
Ni kweli, Tanzania ni nchi maskini. Na si sio wakenya ndio wanawaita hivyo, waulize wanaeconomia (ati economists huitwaje kwa Kiswahili?) wanaosema hivyo!
 
How to deal with Kibera "Flying Toilets*????
Answer! Drop the *Massive Ordnance Air Blast* A.k.a Mother of All Bombs......I think the problem will be solved just Once and for All......
 
Hapo kibera nilienda nikawa nachanja veve asee sinikaambiwa twende msele huko kwa kejo ya chali angu flani jirani bana wacha nikanyage shonde buti yangu Tims ikajaa shonde alafu ilikua kama shonde ya green basi handas ikaruka kabisa nikaaza ku throw up uncontrollably.. Never forget
 
AS the World commemorated World Toilet Day yesterday, WaterAid Tanzania called for the government intervention on improvement of urban sanitation after a new report ranking Tanzania 12th in the world for having the greatest percentage of urban dwellers living without safe, private toilets.
 
Back
Top Bottom