Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Forget Davos; Dandora holds key to inequality

- By Nita Bhalla

(Thomson Reuters Foundation) - As champagne and caviar wash down tough talk of world problems in Davos, the stench of rotten rubbish lingers over an alternativ­e summit in Kenya aimed at tackling the chasm between rich and poor. Welcome to the Kenyan slum of Dandora: known for its fetid garbage mountain and - for this week only - playing host to campaigner­s who are fed up with top-table talk and say they see scant action at ground level where it matters most.

The annual World Economic Forum (WEF) in the plush Swiss ski resort of Davos brings together politician­s and billionair­es, corporates and celebritie­s for four days of summitry on the world’s most pressing issues - issues such as global inequality. But despite celebratin­g its 48th annual meeting, the WEF has failed to curb the rising wealth gap, say activists, who are instead lobbying for change at their own rival events this week.

“The WEF has continued to list inequality as one of the world’s major challenges, and the WEF itself says it isn’t getting any better. But also they have an interest in not fixing it,” said Ben Phillips, director of Global Inequality Alliance, a coalition of 150 charities and trade unions in 50 countries. “It’s very nice to go to a fancy gathering, and over caviar and champagne talk about why every child should go to school and why every mother deserves good health care. But those same bosses who lobby for corporate tax breaks are taking away money from countries that would go into health and education.”

Eighty-two percent of wealth generated last year went to the richest 1 percent of the global population.

A tale of two mountains

Phillips said communitie­s in countries such as Kenya, South Africa, India, Pakistan, Indonesia and Mexico feel inequality will not be solved by the ‘ Davos man’, but by ordinary people mobilising for their rights. So events - ranging from concerts to soccer matches, mass meals to marches - are taking place to help some of the world’s most marginalis­ed understand their rights and demand action.

Located on the outskirts of eastern Nairobi, Dandora slum is a stark example of the inequali- ties faced by millions worldwide.

Establishe­d in 1977 and partially funded by the World Bank, with the aim of offering a higher standard of housing, the area has become the Kenyan capital’s principal dumping ground. The sprawling rubbish tip - which residents estimate is at least the size of three football fields - is a vast mountain, composed of everything from polythene bags and plastic bottles to soiled clothes, rotting food and animal faeces. It is also one of the area’s key employers.

For many of Dandora’s thousands of residents eke out a living on the tip, collecting recyclable waste such as plastic bottles for a daily wage of about 200 Kenyan Shillings ($2). Amid the stench, 59-year-old Marita Saie squats by a dirty puddle, diligently washing a pile of polystyren­e plates. “I manage to make 100 to 150 shillings in a day collecting things from the rubbish,” said Saie. “It’s not enough to cover everything like rent and food. Even when I am sick, I can’t afford to buy medicines, so I look for them in rubbish. I can’t change this life, it’s up to God.”

Tax the rich

Campaigner­s say despite Kenya’s stable economic growth averaging about 5.6 percent of GDP over the last decade, the disparity between rich and poor is on the rise. The number of super-rich in Kenya is among the fastest growing in the world, and Oxfam predicts the number of millionair­es in Kenya will grow by 80 percent over next decade.

Yet while a minority of Kenyans are accumulati­ng wealth, the benefits of economic growth have not trickled down.

The UN says 4 in 10 Kenyans are poor, 13 percent are “destitute”. Such inequality is not inevitable, say campaigner­s. Higher spending on education and health would help close the gap - and a fair tax system is key. Kenya relies on tax as its main source of domestic revenue, but contributi­ons by the rich are negligible, said Oxfam. Capital gains tax, for example, is 5 percent and there is no inheritanc­e tax or net wealth tax. Higher taxes could let the government invest more in sectors such as health, education and job creation. And grassroots movements - where ordinary people understand the issues and can organise and lobby to change government policies - are the best way to achieve this, they say.

Rap for change

So campaigner­s in Nairobi organised the Usawa Festival, or Equality Festival, in Dandora on Saturday, with music and dance deployed to highlight social problems and engage people.

Juliani, a popular Kenyan hiphop gospel musician - who raps on poverty, gender and unemployme­nt and was born and raised in Dandora - said the aim was to shake people out of complacenc­y. “There is a lot of imbalance in our communitie­s,” the 33-year-old dreadlocke­d star said beside the heap of squalor. “People think this is a curse from God or because they are not working hard enough. They have become comfortabl­e with the injustice. So we want to make them see it doesn’t have to be like this, and their lives are supposed to be way better.”

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 ??  ?? A scavenger carries recyclable plastic materials packed in a sack at the Dandora dumping site. Reuters
A scavenger carries recyclable plastic materials packed in a sack at the Dandora dumping site. Reuters

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