Kenya: Urban Women Grow Food in Sacks, by Nancy Karanja, Danielle Nierenberg and Mary Njenga

Driving through the crowded streets of the sprawling Kibera slum in Nairobi, it’s nearly impossible to describe how many people live in this area of about 400 hectares, the equivalent of just over half the size of Central Park in New York City.

Everywhere you look there are people – between 700,000 to one million people live here in what is likely the largest slum in sub-Saharan Africa.

And despite the challenges people in Kibera face — little space, a dearth of water and sanitation services, and a lack of land ownership are the big ones — some residents manage to thrive.

We met a “self-help” group of female farmers in Kibera who are growing food for their families and selling the surplus to their neighbors.

Such groups are present all over Kenya, giving youth, women and vulnerable people the opportunity to organize, share information and skills, and ultimately improve their well-being while giving them a voice that otherwise would not be heard.

The women we met were growing vegetables on what they call “vertical farms/gardens.” But instead of skyscrapers, these farms are in tall, recycled sacks filled with soil, and the women grow crops in them on different levels by poking holes in the bags. They mainly plant seeds and seedlings of spinach, kale, sweet pepper and spring onions.

The women’s group received training, seeds and sacks from the French non-governmental organization Solidarites to start their sack gardens.

More than 1,000 women in this neighborhood are growing food in a similar way. It is something that the International Committee of the Red Cross recognized as a solution to food security in urban areas during the 2007 and 2008 political crisis in the slums of Nairobi.

For about a month, no food could enter these areas from rural Kenya. But most residents didn’t go without food because so many of them were growing crops — in sacks and on vacant public land, such as along rail lines and river banks.

These small gardens could produce big benefits in terms of nutrition, food security and income. All the women told us that they saved money because they no longer had to buy vegetables from the markets or kiosks. They said the vegetables were fresh and tasted better because they were organically grown, although that sentiment also might come from the pride of growing something themselves.

Mary Mutola has farmed this land for over two decades. She and the other farmers, mostly women, don’t own the land where they grow spinach, kale, spider plant, squash, amaranth and fodder. Instead, the land is owned by the National Social Security Fund, which has allowed the women to farm through an informal arrangement.

In other words, the farmers have no legal right to the land. They have been forced to stop farming more than once over the years, and although they are harassed less frequently, they still face challenges.

About a year ago, the city forced them to stop using untreated wastewater (sewage from a sewer line which they tapped into) to both irrigate and fertilize their crops. Although wastewater can carry a number of risks, including pathogens and contamination from heavy metals, it also provides a rich — and free — source of fertilizer to farmers who have no money to buy expensive fertilizer. And because of longer periods of drought (likely a result of climate change) in sub-Saharan Africa, the farmers were not forced to depend on rainfall to water their crops.

But even with the loss of their main water supply and nutrient sources, Mutola and the other farmers are continuing to come up with innovative ways of growing food crops and incomes from this farm.

In partnership with Urban Harvest the farmers are not only growing food to eat and sell but, perhaps surprisingly, also becoming suppliers of seed of traditional leafy African vegetables. These include amaranth, spider plant and African nightshade for the commercial rural farmers who supply Nairobi with these high-demand commodities.

Kibera farmers have always grown fodder for livestock feed for both urban and rural farmers. But by establishing a continual source of seed for traditional African vegetables, they’re helping dispel the myth that urban agriculture benefits only poor people living in cities.

Using very small plots of land, about 50 square meters, and double beds, the farmers can raise seeds very quickly. Fast-growing varieties like amaranth and spider plant take only about three months to produce seeds, worth roughly 3,000 Kenyan shillings (about US$40) in profit. And these seed plots, because they are small, take very little additional time to weed and manage.

The future for these farmers continues to be uncertain. Their land could be taken away, the drought could further jeopardize their crops, and the loss of wastewater for fertilizer could reduce production. But they continue to persevere despite these challenges.

Danielle Nierenberg is a senior researcher with the Worldwatch Institute; Nancy Karanja is a professor at the University of Nairobi; and Mary Njenga is a Ph.D. student at the University of Nairobi. A version of this article also appeared in the Omaha World-Herald.

Source – http://allafrica.com/stories/201002180809.html

Marching together with a city-wide sanitation strategy, 2010.

Water and Sanitation Program

Full-text: http://www.wsp.org/UserFiles/file/citywide_sanitation.pdf

This book contains the principles a municipal government should consider before developing a citywide sanitation strategy. In this context, this strategy refers to a city’s strategic mid-term sanitation development plan, which incorporates vision, missions, objectives and targets as well as specifi c strategies to improve sanitation services.

Chapter 1 starts with an introduction of the background, objectives, concept, and the process of a city sanitation development, followed by a description of the position of the citywide sanitation strategy within the sanitation development planning process. The remaining chapters describe the steps to develop a citywide sanitation strategy. Chapters 2 to 6 explain the fi ve major steps of the process: a) establishing a working group, b) city sanitation mapping, c) defi ning a sanitation development framework, d) preparing a strategy for sanitation services development, and e) preparing a strategy for development of non-technical aspects. Chapter 7 concludes the book with a series of follow-up activities for implementation upon approval of the citywide sanitation strategy.

The book uses the phrase total sanitation services to mean the ideal level of sanitation services desired by a city. Such services should be accessible to all residents, be available city wide, be technically complete and sustainable, and not cause negative environmental impacts.

Strengthening Capacities for Planning of Sanitation and Wastewater Use: Experiences from two cities in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, 2010.

Link to full-text:  http://www.irc.nl/page/51911

Stef Smits, Carmen Da Silva Wells and Alexandra Evans. IRC International Water & Sanitation Centre.

Many peri-urban communities use wastewater (often untreated) in agriculture. Although wastewater-dependent agriculture provides livelihoods to farmers, there are associated health and environmental risks. The roots of this situation lie in the poor sanitation in cities, both due to limited access to basic sanitation services and improper collection, treatment and discharge of wastewater into water bodies, which may subsequently be used for irrigation purposes. Addressing this situation requires integrated planning towards the improvement of conditions along the entire sanitation chain (from household latrines to collection, treatment and reuse of wastewater), while maintaining the characteristics of wastewater valued by farmers, such as nutrient content. This has been the basic premise behind the Wastewater Agriculture and Sanitation for Poverty Alleviation (WASPA) in Asia project, carried out in the towns of Rajshahi in Bangladesh and Kurunegala in Sri Lanka. This document provides an overview of the experiences of the project and provides a critical reflection on the WASPA concept and its applicability.

The project found that the sanitation situation in both cities was less severe than originally hypothesised. It was not only limited access to basic sanitation which contributed to wastewater flows; rather other more important sources of pollution were identified, such as discharges from small industries and leakage from poorly maintained or inadequate septic tanks. Yet, the situation also proved to be more complex than originally thought, necessitating that a broader range of stakeholders be involved in the identification and implementation of solutions. The multi-stakeholder approach of Learning Alliances and participatory planning cycle provided a useful framework for addressing this complex problem. This paper also identifies potential drawback to the approach, in that stakeholders tend to identify isolated and conventional actions to address the situation, and thus need strong facilitation and increased knowledge to arrive at appropriate solutions. Also, transaction costs of the approach are high, in terms of getting the teams in place, starting up the multi-stakeholder process, and getting stakeholders to carry out a joint planning exercise and subsequently implement their plans. However, the paper shows that integrated, joint planning is important for addressing complex problems that span sectoral, administrative and social divides and that, ultimately, the high transaction costs are justified.

World Health Day (WHD) is celebrated on April 7th to mark the founding of the World Health Organization. Each year, the WHO selects a key global health issue and organizes international, regional and local events on the Day to highlight the selected theme. To ensure sustained action on this topic, WHD also marks the beginning of year-long related activities.

The theme of WHD for this year is “Urbanism and Healthy Living” (PAHO), and “Urbanization and Health” (WHO). In last year’s World Health Report, urbanization was cited as one of the biggest health challenges of the 21st century. Therefore, this theme has been selected in recognition of the effect urbanization has on our collective health, globally and for each of us individually. The main objective of WHD 2010 will be to integrate the day into a sustained public health strategy to incorporate health more broadly into urban public policy.

Apart from World Health Day, a number of events around the globe will take place in 2010 to mark the theme of Urbanization and Health. These will include:

  • UN Habitat’s World Urban Youth Assembly (March 19-20) and World Urban Forum – 5 (March 22-26) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • The World Expo (May1-October 31) on the theme “Better City, Better Life” in Shanghai, China
  • Production of a WHO/UN Habitat Global Report on Urbanization and Health (July/August)
  • PAHO Directing Council’s Urban Health Round Table (September)
  • The WHO Global Forum on Health and Urbanization (November 15-17) in Kobe, Japan

1000 Cities, 1000 Lives’ is a global campaign designed to encourage cities, towns, neighborhoods and local authorities to conduct health promoting activities on or around WHD (the week of April 7-11).

The goal of the ‘1000 Cities’ campaign is to open public spaces to health, either by closing off portions of streets to motorized vehicles and opening them up to people, holding town hall meetings and community forums, promoting more active civil society participation in local planning and governance, initiating clean-up campaigns, and conducting work-place and school-based initiatives.

The goal of the ‘1000 Lives’ campaign is to collect 1000 stories of “urban health champions,” i.e. people who have taken actions that have resulted in a significant impact on health in their cities. Individuals are encouraged to submit both examples of the events they are planning to run in their cities, towns or neighbourhoods, and videos about those they nominate to be urban health champions.

You can follow the campaign and learn more about WHD by visiting this site:
http://www.who.int/world-health-day/2010/en/index.html

This website also includes a more detailed list of suggested activities for WHD and a Toolkit for Event Organizers. To officially register the event being held by your city, municipality, town or neighbourhood for WHD, please visit:
http://www.who.int/world-health-day/2010/registration_city/en/index.html

CAIRO—The Coptic monastery of St. Samaan overlooks Zabaleen, Arabic for Garbage City, which gets its name from the primary source of income for its 60,000 inhabitants: garbage collection and disposal.

The church carved into the mountain is dedicated to the legend that Egypt’s Coptic Christian minority performed a miracle by moving a mountain by faith to thwart threats of extermination.

“So we can make a mountain move, why can’t we recycle the garbage?” said Ezzat Naem. Naem, 45, grew up in Garbage City. His father was a garbage man. And his grandfather was the city’s first garbage collector. “He was an innovator, like me,” Naem said.

In 2008, USAID awarded Naem a two-year, $34,000 grant to support his creation, a community recycling school. It was one of 22 grants made by the Agency and the Synergos Institute, through the Arab World Social Innovators Program, to support entrepreneurial humanitarian men and women in Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Photo by Analeed Marcus
Abd Elghany Hamady Barakat, who was born blind into an underprivileged family, seamlessly maneuvers the new American University in Cairo campus. Barakat received a USAID scholarship to attend AUC, where he is majoring in political science and international relations. He said he hopes to start the university’s first club for disabled students.

At the recycling school, students as young as 9 learn Excel, Photoshop, and other computer skills which are part of a real-life recycling business. Students create their own spreadsheets and chart how many bottles they’ve collected, their worth, and their profit.

The school generates about $10,000 annually from recycling products like shampoo bottles. And students learn mathematics, reading, and writing with the goal of starting their own recycling businesses.

Children in Garbage City wake up at 9 p.m. and work with their fathers until 2 a.m. before returning home with recyclables found in Cairo streets. The women work into the morning sorting their finds while their sons attend Naem’s community school.

“In the beginning, I didn’t even know how to write my name, and now I’m doing mathematics, and I know how to use the computer,” said Ibrahim Bakhit, 13, who collects recyclable cardboard with his father at night. “I insist on learning. I want to know a lot of things.”

In addition to garbage sorting, Garbage City residents earn income from pig farming. Pigs consumed 60 percent of organic garbage before Egyptian officials made the animals illegal earlier this year and slaughtered them in a nationwide response to H1N1, also called swine flu, even though there is no evidence the disease is spread by pigs.

Moreover, without pigs to dispose of the waste, trash piled up, causing environmental damage. Incomes were further cut when the Egyptian government contracted three multinational corporations to collect the city’s garbage. But the townspeople found a substitute in recycling.

The school remains largely for boys—following Egyptian cultural standards—but after-hours computer workshops recently began for girls and mothers.

The city smells of garbage. Enormous bags of trash are piled on rooftops, in doorways, in alleyways, and strewn about the streets.

But Naem’s students have seen the alternative.

“We are so happy when we go on field trips, spend time together, and smell fresh air,” said Naem, who kept his hometown and family business secret until he revealed it in a composition that was praised by his teachers. He has since gone on to earn a bachelor’s degree in commerce.

As a 12-year-old, Naem wrote in his composition: “If a minister or the president, himself, is absent for a week, his vice can replace him. But if a garbage collector is absent, no one can replace him.”

Source – Frontlines

NEW DELHI: India’s ambitious national programme to provide quality healthcare to the country’s urban poor – the National Urban has been shelved for the time being and will not be launched during the present 11th five-year plan.

Designed on the lines of UPA government’s flagship National Rural Health Mission, NUHM was being prepared to provide accessible, affordable and reliable primary healthcare facilities to the 28 crore people living in urban slums in 429 cities and towns.

The project had already received in-principle approval from the Planning Commission and was also cleared by the ministry’s Expenditure Finance Committee.

However, Union health secretary K Sujatha Rao said that NUHM would now be launched during the 12th plan.

Rao told TOI, “We have so far focused on energizing India’s rural areas with NRHM. Sinve there are just two years left in the 11th plan (2007-2012), NUHM will be launched post-2012 now.”

She added, “Over the next two years, we will sharpen NUHM’s execution plan and get its strategy right. Once both NUHM and NRHM run simultaneously, we can call it India’s Unified National Health Mission.”

At present, 60% of the pressure on urban hospitals is because of non-availability of health facilities and doctors in rural areas. In hospitals in state capitals, around 70% of patients are from rural areas, Union health minister Ghulam Nabi Azad had told TOI some time ago.

NUHM’s launch is being constantly deferred since 2008. It was initially to be launched to cover 35 cities in the first year with 429 cities by the end of the third year. All cities with a population above one lakh, state capitals and even district headquarters were to be brought under NUHM’s purview.

The urban mission was expected to specially benefit the 6.9-crore slum population. Over 285 million urban people in India account for 28% of the country’s total population. It is expected to increase to 33% by 2026.

According to projections, out of the total population increase of 371 million during 2001-2026, the share of increase in the urban population is expected to be 182 million who suffered from serious health problems.

As per the National Family Health Survey-III, the under-five mortality rate among urban poor at 72.7 is higher than the urban average of 51.9. More than 50% children are overweight and almost 60% of children miss total immunisation before completing one year.

Source – Times of India

Getting land for housing; what strategies work for low-income groups?

Full-text: http://www.iied.org/pubs/pdfs/10580IIED.pdf

This Brief is based on the editorial from Environment and Urbanization Vol 21, No 2, October 2009. The struggle by low-income groups in urban areas to get housing and basic services is often a struggle either to get land on which to build or to get tenure of land they already occupy. Their drive to get land, their energy and their capacity are never factored into official housing policies.

In many nations, the last 10 years have shown how the scale and scope of what they can do is much increased when they are organized through federations of savings groups and these federations are offering government partnerships in addressing their needs for housing and services. Where national and local governments respond positively, much can be achieved as shown by government–federation partnerships in Thailand, the Philippines, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka and Cambodia.

Even local governments with limited funding and capacity can increase the supply and reduce the cost of land for housing through allocating publicly owned land, through making available land for housing by extending infrastructure and services to new areas, and through pro-poor changes to building and land use regulations and the ways these are applied. Organized urban poor groups have also shown how they can often negotiate an affordable price with the owner of the land they occupy, if supported to do so (as in Thailand and the Philippines).

Urban poor groups also find ways to narrow the gap between the cost of the land they need and what they can afford – smaller plot sizes (although this has to be negotiated with the authorities) and incremental building, and the use of credit (so costs are spread over time). This may be helped by careful use of subsidies. What delivers for the urban poor is not the provision of legal title but governments and international agencies that listen to, work with and support them, including providing finance that they can draw on as and when needed.

The Measurement, Learning & Evaluation Project will spotlight six stories a year that personalize the reproductive health barriers and challenges for women and men living in urban slums.  Future stories will be on Senegal (February 2010), and Kenya (April 2010)

This feature story describes the fictional life of Olubukola and Kehinde, a married couple, and their children living in the slums of Abuja, Nigeria, the difficulties they face in accessing health care, and how low-cost, high-quality, accessible family planning services integrated into primary, maternal, and HIV care could empower the family.

Link: http://www.cpc.unc.edu/urbanreproductivehealth/news/meeting-the-needs-of-nigeria2019s-poor-women

Jhpiego has implemented two large programs in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya in the past several years and is a founding member of the Nairobi Urban Health Poverty Partnership, a collaborative effort designed to demonstrate the variety of interventions that must be addressed to foster sustainable improvements to health in urban slums. 

With support from the Rockefeller Foundation (2005-2007) and the Wallace Global Fund (2006-2008) Jhpiego has created a sustainable model that links empowered communities with strengthened health facilities.

Examples of the sustainable successes that Jhpiego has spearheaded in the slums include:

  • Peer Education
  • Ongoing Support Groups
  • Community Mapping

Through its Nairobi programs, slums assessments in other parts of Africa, as well as its technical expertise, Jhpiego is looking expand its urban programming to other slums in Kenya and worldwide. Jhpiego has shown that targeted amounts of funding can make a huge impact.

Jhpiego website – http://www.jhpiego.org/whatwedo/urbanslums.htm

SPLASH, the ERA-NET of the European Water Initiative will launch a research call on 1st March, 2010. The overall call budget will be approx. 1.7 Mio Euro. The call will be funded by the following donors:

  • Austria Development Cooperation (ADC), Austria
  • Department for International Development (DFID), United Kingdom
  • Ministère des Affaires Étrangères et Européenes (MAEE), France
  • Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA), Sweden
  • Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), Switzerland

In Sub-Saharan Africa, the rates of urbanization have generally exceeded the capacities of national and local governments to plan and manage sanitation systems in an efficient, equitable and sustainable way. Improving sanitation services to the urban poor is an urgent priority that will have major positive impacts on human health and dignity, economic productivity and the environment. Research is required to support these efforts.

The major objective of the SPLASH research call is to contribute to the understanding and implementation at scale of sustainable sanitation service chains in low-income urban areas in Sub-Saharan Africa.

More information – http://www.splash-era.net/sanitation-call/index.php