Dr. Umaru Bah, CEO
DataWise (SL) Ltd.
@DataWiseSL
*
So Gibril came all the way abroad from United
Stay to manage the kompanie. Waste Management Kompanie. That was what they
called the kompanie. Waste Management. But the kompanie kind of went to
waste. So Gibril Wilson, when he came, he wanted to start all over. Clean out
the whole mess. Everything. So he changed the name to Masada. And let go of many, many of us push-kiat garbage
workers.
But the old Kompanie still owed us wages. And we
had nothing to work with because it owned even the push-kiat we used to haul the
garbage. So Gibril took sympathy on us and gave us the push-kiats for free. I
painted mine, put my name and motto on it. And that’s how I got my own
business.
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| Abu-Bak with his Push-Kiat |
And that’s not all. When I get up at four in the
morning every day from Monday to Saturday and go to Hill Street... that’s where
we park our push-kiat at the end of the day for security reasons, that big
compound behind the fence...when I get up
at four in the morning every day from Monday to Saturday and go to Hill Street
to pick up my push-kiat to start my day, there are a lot of people who are waiting
for me, waiting on me. Because they also depend on me, on this push-kiat, for
their daily livelihood. You see all these plastic bottles? None of them goes to
waste. That’s why you see them all in these bags hanging from the sides of the
push-kiat. You should come with me to Kingtom Bomeh. There’s a whole village of
very hardworking women no one sees. Literally invisible. Because they are lost
deep in pitch-black suffocating smoke whole day from 5 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.,
rummaging through people’s garbage to collect plastic. They are called
kop-kompanie. Because they are a whole well-organized kop. Kop? It’s a kind of
osusu business. It’s when a group of people or a small community come together
and cooperate to form a small business. They call them kop.
So these kop-kompanie women, they come together
every day at five o'clock in the morning with these big, big, big bags made of
interwoven plastic. Very big. Bigger than this push-kiat. Big like this. [Spreads out arms wide open, head swinging
swiftly to one side with chin gesturing at one hand, then swinging a short
quick arc to chin-gesture at the other hand]. That’s how big. They collect empty plastic
bottles like these here in the bags. But those are gold. They are rare. Only
households in well-to-do neighborhoods throw them out. In fact most, even those from the
well-heeled, recycle them. They use them for their Ginger-beer, which some make
for home consumption, while others prepare and give them to their servants to
go out and sell for them. That’s how some of them make do too, you know.
Others, they use them to save face. You know how?
O.k. See the purified water in these
small five hundred-leones plastic? They are considered po-man-wata. Wealthy people do not serve po-man-wata to their fellow wealthy folk. At least they are not supposed to. So some, they pour the water into the recycled
gentry-man-wata bottles. The most popular and respected gentri-man-wata is Grafton water. The
largest Grafton water bottle is in highest demand. They empty the po-man wata
into the big gentry-man Grafton water bottle. Then when they have gentri visitors,
they take out their shiny, well-polished water glasses from their cupboards
along with their Grafton water bottle full of po-man-wata. And serve their
guests.
Some gentri people also do not throw out empty cans. Those Coke cans.
Vimto cans. Fanta cans. Sprite cans. They keep them for collectors who come to
their homes to buy them. Discreetly. Like they are selling marijuana or
Tramadol or something. They don’t know that we know all their secrets. But we
do. Oh if only they know how much we know! But we are not judging. Because we are
all suffering. We are all doing what we must do to survive. That’s why me, I
am not hypocritical about this. That’s why I am not ashamed of what I do.
That’s why you see my name and motto printed boldly and proudly on this
push-kiat. See it? It’s at the bottom all the way here. Just above the tires.
Oh! You can’t see it because of the dirt. It says B-Bak Got Your Back. And my motto is Wan Man Poison Nar Orda Man Meat. B-Bak is my nickname. Get it?
So no. No plastic bottles in the bin. No cans
either. They are rare. They are pure gold. That’s why I put them immediately in
these bags you see hanging over the sides of the push-kiat. But nothing goes to
waste really. This whole garbage collection is a big, big, big industry. Big
like this [spreads out arms wide open,
head swinging swiftly to one side with chin gesturing at one hand, then
swinging a short quick arc to chin-gesture at the other hand]. That’s how
big. Nothing goes to waste. These torn, threadbare clothing, including the
socks and underwear. Yes, even the underwear. These worn-out shoes full of
holes. These belts without buckles. These computer things here, which I don’t
know what they are for. Most were bought used from the United Stay. And when
they get to Bomeh, they will be rescued from the dump to be repaired or patched
up to be sold and used again. And again. And again until there’s nothing left
to throw away, even to the bin. That’s how we recycle here.That's why we recycle here. It’s not a lifestyle
of the privilege. It’s fighting for life. That’s what I meant by people
depending on me for their living and their livelihood. You get me?.
There are lots of these po-man wata plastic in-between smelly shit-bags. But when I take them to Bomeh, those kop-kompanie
women, they go through them all, through the poop diapers even. And collect
them all and put them in these big, big, big bags. Very big, big like this [spreads out arms wide open, head swinging swiftly to one side with chin
gesturing at one hand, then swinging a short quick arc to chin-gesture at the
other hand]. That’s how big. And everyday, around 6 p.m., these big, big, big
lorries come by to pick them up. They are big, big like this [spreads out arms wide open, head swinging
swiftly to one side with chin gesturing at one hand, then swinging a short
quick arc to chin-gesture at the other hand]. They are big. They come and
collect these big, big bags of po-man-wata plastic and pay the see-yo of the
kop-kompanie women. And they drive them all the way to Guinea. They say that’s
where they have the factories to do all the recycling that they export to
China. Anyway they pay the see-yo of the kop kompanie for all the Bomeh
plastic. See-yo? That’s just a nickname for the head of the kop-kompanie. The
see-yo. They got the nicknames from the kompanies owned by the foreigners and by the
JCs and the local big-wan-dem. That’s also what they call themselves.
See-yo. Like me, if I were a big man,
they would call me Abu Bak, See-Yo, Wan Man Poison Nar Orda Man Meat Ltd. Get it?
Anyway the see-yo of their Kop-Kompanie, she then shares their day’s earnings fairly among themselves. And that’s when these
hard-working women, full of thick black smoke and filth, then go home and
cook for their family. You see what I mean? Their men won’t kneel in the dirt
to put meal on the table for their wife and kids. But they will eat the meal
that the women prepared from that dump. Tell me, who’s garbage really? Me, I
collect garbage so that I won’t be garbage. That’s all I got to say about that.
Let’s just leave it at that. Ok?
But it’s not just the kop-kompanie women who
depend on me. There are also the kids. The homeless kids. The orphan kids. The
parentless kids. Parentless because their parents abandoned or neglected them
out of abject poverty. They are the ones that really get me. They are the ones
who really do the dirty jobs you know. Not us. When we get to the dump, they
are the ones who really take out the filth and carry them right to the exact
spot in the field where the City Council man or government man tells
them they should dump it. I don’t know who they are. They are some faceless
people who do nothing but demand money from us, from the Kop-kompanie women and
sometimes from even the kids. That’s all I got to say about that. Let’s just
leave it at that. Ok?
So anyway the kids clear out and clean all the
push-kiats. I give them three thousand leones per trip. I
know man, that’s not enough at all. Nothing could be enough. They should not
even be there! Their presence reminds me of my own kids. Of why I do this. So
that my kids won’t ever be in a place like this. Nevertheless, those kids are
the part of my job that hurts me the most.
That’s why I collect and put all these plastic bottles on the side. It’s
for the boys. I give it to them for free to sell to the Guinean lorry drivers.
Many use the money to go buy Tramadol. That’s how they cope. That’s how they
manage to live enough to live another day. I know somehow that giving them
money to help them get hooked on drugs all the more makes it much worse. But honestly,
it makes me feel better. It helps me cope with my own psychological
pain and the guilt of working with them.
My fees? They vary. I charge by the
bag. Anywhere from two thousand to sometimes five thousand leones. But even
that, it depends on how heavy each bag is. And I judge that by how I see it
with my eyes and feel it with my hands. But all in all, the average cost for
each bag of trash is three thousand leones. I make about two to three trips a
day to Bomeh. On a good day, I take home one hundred thousand leones. When the
day’s really tough, I take home forty thousand leones. At least enough for
tomorrow’s chop money.
To tell you the truth, I am getting too old and
tired for this. The loads are getting heavier and heavier every day now, it seems. That’s because I am getting weaker and weaker. I sneeze a lot and cough
a lot. It’s old age and asthma. Most people I know my age are dead. No joke. I
am 45 years now you know. It’s not easy loading this up and then lifting it and
pulling it on two wheels with my own bare hands only, all the way to Bomeh!
All I want now is one of these new motorized
push-kiats that they say the EU gave for free to City Council or the government. They are supposed to give
them to us for free, but you get one only if you have the right
connections or enough money to be connected. Get it? That’s all I got to say about that. Let’s just leave it at that. Ok?
My dream is to retire on one of those motorized
push-kiats. I will sell this one, use the money to hire one or two garbage collectors who will ride with me and collect and sort the garbage. Then they ride in the back with the full load to Bomeh, while I enjoy the breeze on my face. When we get to Bomeh, the collectors get out and they, not the boys, clear out and dump the loads. All in one hour! We would do six-seven-eight-nine-ten trips! Easy. Just like that.
Easy load. Easy ride. Easy money. That’s
the life man. That’s the life.

Laying bare the rampant inequalities and inequities of the system. The real heroes of the economy are people like Aub-Bak who gain their livelihood through honest and hard work, day in day out. Those in power, whose life of theft and waste, make it difficult, if not impossible, for the dispossessed to rise above water-level to catch their breath.
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