More than 20 million people in the world work as informal waste workers (ILO 2013.). Waste pickers represent the largest workforce in the recycling chain and recover a higher proportion of recyclable materials than formal waste management systems.
Through their work in recovering recyclable and reusable materials, waste pickers â who are often discriminated against and face stigma for belonging to poor and marginalized groups, working classes, oppressed castes, ethnic, religious, and racial minorities, indigenous peoples, climate and war refugees, and survivors of violence and substance abuse â play a major role in reducing plastic pollution and carbon emissions.
Waste picker representatives from 19 countries are gathered in Nairobi to participate in the International Alliance of Waste Pickers Coordination Meeting. The general objectives are to discuss the interim work towards their Elective Congress; to promote connection and trust-building among waste pickers from the different regions, and to celebrate International Waste Pickers Day on March 1st.
March 1st commemorates waste pickers who lost their lives on this day in the Universidad Libre De Barranquilla Colombia in 1992. 11 years ago, waste pickers were invited to the university under the pretext of receiving recyclable materials. Once inside the campus, they were beaten and shot to death, and their bodies were to be used for research and organ trafficking.
Further, through the march, they highlight that International Waste-pickers Day is a day to memorialise the struggles of waste-pickers for recognition, and dignity across the planet. It is the day to mark the achievements of waste-pickers associations, organizations and unions and the International Alliance of Waste-pickers. On this International Waste-pickers Day and through their march, waste pickers demand the following from the national and county governments in Kenya and governments around the world:
- Recognise the occupation of waste-pickers and recognise waste-pickersâ right to access waste.
- Waste-pickers should be paid fair and better prices for recovering and reclaiming recyclable and reusable materials.
- Affordable, comfortable and quality housing for all waste-pickers and their families.
- Government should give waste management tenders to waste-pickers, run enterprises and organizations.
- Health and life insurance for all waste-pickers and their families.
- The dumpsites should not be closed before providing sustainable and regularised livelihood opportunities to waste-pickers.
As part of the weekâs activities, waste pickers also visited the Dandora dumpsite, which covers approximately 70 acres, and is the destination of about 1,100 tonnes of solid waste generated daily by Nairobi’s population. The dumpsite sustains the livelihoods of approximately 3,000 waste picker families. They recover plastic, food, clothes, paper and bottles that they can sell for much-needed income. “One of our biggest challenges here is access to health and access to education” says Winnye and Joyce, National Organizing Secretaries of Kenyan National Waste Pickers Welfare Association (KENAWPWA).
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