User talk:Ayoung0131/Sandbox

Note: the following is an identical copy of the article on the Zabbalean as it was posted on Wikipedia as it was prior to October 11th 2010, on which date I made some major edits. I have kept a copy of the original article here for my reference as I continue to work/edit on this article.

The Zabbaleen (Egyptian Arabic: زبالين "garbage people" ) are an Egyptian community of mainly Coptic Christians who were allowed to collect and dispose of the city of Cairo's waste by feeding it to their pigs. This occupation, the only one available to them, has been limited to inorganic material by the state-ordered culling of all pigs in Cairo. No one knows how the thousands of tons of organic waste generated each day will be disposed now that the pigs have been exterminated.

The Zabbaleen generally performed this service very cheaply or for free, making a living by sorting the waste materials for reuse orrecycling. Waste food is fed to livestock (most often pigs) or poultry. Other materials, such as steel, glass and plastic bottles, are sorted by hand and sold as raw materials. Other items are repaired or reused. Some material is burnt as fuel. Traditionally, donkey driven carts are used by males to collect waste from homes, which is sorted by female members of the family in Zabbaleen homes. It is claimed that Zabbaleen reuse or recycle 80-90% of the waste they collect (a figure that the most modern waste management systems in the world aspire to), however this must be put into context of the fact that the Zabbaleen do not collect all the waste, and concentrate on wealthier areas.

Until the 1980s, there was no formal system of waste collection in Cairo. All collection was performed by the Zabbaleen. This informal garbage collection system is still a fundamental part of the city's solid waste management. The Zabbaleen collect between a third and a half of the 6,500 tonnes of Municipal solid waste that Cairo produces every day, with half being collected by the city and private companies and the remaining 1,500 tonnes left uncollected, generally in the poorest areas. Any uncollected garbage that is burnt will severely exacerbate the air pollutionproblem in Cairo.

The Zabbaleen live in an area known locally as Garbage City. The Zabbaleen in Cairo (an estimated 60,000 - 70,000 in number) are mostly descendants of poor farmers from Upper Egypt who settled in the city in the 1950s.

Many Zabbaleen suffer from health problems such as hepatitis, due to the low-tech sorting methods used and general poverty.

Municipal authorities in Egypt have tried for several years to replace the Zabbaleen with modern waste collection and disposal methods, primarily employing large foreign companies. This process has attracted controversy in the area, with many residents objecting to higher fees for the modern disposal service. The modern collection service has also been criticized for being unable to recycle as much of the waste material as the Zabbaleen.

History
The Zabbaleen people of Cairo Egypt, reside in a town called Fustat, a slum at the foot of the Muqattam Hills. At the foot of this hill, in the slums, reside seventy thousand people, twenty seven thousand of them Zabbaleens. In the Arab world, they are known as the Zabbalin, which in English translates to rag pickers. In other words, they are known to the city as the garbage people. They are people who have become a ‘cast of their own excluded from the rest of society .Currently, they handle one-third of the garbage of the 14 million people residing in Cairo at no cost to the city authorities. They collect up to three thousand tons of garbage every day and, up to eighty five percent of that waste is recycled by them directly.

Approximately one hundred years ago a group, which became known as the ‘Wahiya or People of the Oasis’, voluntarily took on the task of collecting Cairo’s house hold waste, which they then comodified to benefit themselves with a somewhat profitable gain in income. This was continued and done so and eventually obtaining signed agreements with those whose buildings and properties were situated inside the city. Eventually, the use of the waste known to the Wahiya was no longer capable of being comodified due to a change in the demand for such recycling waste. Seeing as they wished to continue to profit from this waste collecting lifestyle, they set out and found willing buyers. These buyers were a similar group of migrants (decedents of poor farmers) who came to Cairo during the 1930s and-40s. They were known as the Zarraba. Upon immigrating, they founded ‘makeshift settlements on agricultural land’. There they comodified the breeding of pigs selling off both the pigs as well as the waste (dung) they left behind as fertilizer. The Wahiya realized that by selling them (at minimal cost) the garbage and waste, they could both profit financially, creating a middle man scenario. Eventually these two groups of people placed all their efforts together and joined to form a union as a people to become known today as, the Zabbaleen.

Modernisation and Controversy
By 1980, the population of Cairo was rapidly expanding. “As the city grew and the amount of daily garbage skyrocketed, Cairo's trash collection needs began to overtake the Zabbaleen's capacity to provide services” (Assad, 1998, p2). Something certainly needed to be done about this problem.

In the '80s and '90s, the Governorate of Cairo sought for the Zabbaleen to 'modernise' their collection equipment; in other words to move from donkey carts to collection trucks. At least part of the motivation for the Governorate to modernise their MSWM has been aesthetic. In 1987, a decree was issued banning the use of donkey drawn carts for garbage collection in Cairo. This was later redefined, to allow their use in some areas of the city, although not in any of the wealthier areas; which produce the most lucrative waste, and no doubt are more frequented by tourists.

By the beginning of the twenty-first century, the governorate sought the involvement of three European waste management companies, FCC and Urbaser (both Spanish) and the Italian AMA. They have been widely criticized for doing this, by both media commentators and grassroots development workers, who have argued that they should instead have provided the Zabbaleen with the resources to expand their services to the whole city. This issue is still contentious, for example the BBC, recently reported that the Zabbaleen are “more environmentally friendly than the mechanised garbage crushing trucks from Europe that the municipality brought in about 10 years ago. Once rubbish has been mechanically compressed, no recycling is possible. It can only be dumped.” (Smith, 2005)

However, Satterthwaite (1999), while confirming that processed waste is difficult to recycle, cites Cairo as an example of an authority that is “seeking to introduce social and environmental goals into their solid waste collection and management.”

It is certainly true that the Zabbaleen have been disregarded since migrating to Cairo. As Aziz (2004, p13) comments: “The Zabbaleen have a negative image with both the government and with part of the general public, often supported by the media. This has partly to do with their (mainly) Christian background and the fact that many raise pigs. The official policy towards the Zabbaleen fluctuates between ignoring them and harassing them. “The national and local government do not treat the Zabbaleen as stakeholders at all. Their voice is hardly heard in the media. The whole debate about private sector participation did not include them, except during a few events organised by development organisations.”

Reporters have complained that the contracting of large European firms could lead to mass unemployment, and potentially exploitation of the Zabbaleen. However, one report indicates that this view is possibly naïve. It was claimed that the companies had been paid less than a quarter of the money they were originally owed in 2003-4 by the Governorate of Cairo, due to a penalties system for incomplete work. The Managing Director of IES claimed that the company had “not been allowed to review the penalties in detail”, and that they “already pay the Zabbaleen L.E. 435,000 per month for this service. Yet the GCBA has penalised the company L.E. 1,500,000 per month for shortcomings in their work”. If this is true, then it seems just as likely to be Egyptians, from both sides, who have been exploiting the foreign waste management companies. This has reportedly led to failure in the system, with litter-strewn streets and the continued use of the unsanitary landfill sites (Rashed, 2004). It could well be that this is why one of “the main outcomes of the large-scale privatisation seems to have been that a new generation of street waste pickers has been created.” (Aziz, 2004, p12)

Sister Emmanuelle (Madeleine Cinquin) also known as "Mother Teresa of Cairo" spent more than two decades working with Cairo's Zabbaleen. She helped create a network of clinics, schools and gardens to serve the children of the slums, and an association she founded now operates in eight countries, from Lebanon to Burkina Faso. Sister Emmanuelle was a nun who lived for years among scavengers in Cairo's slums and who won wide acclaim for defending the rights of the poor and marginalized. Sister Emmanuelle initiated development efforts in the Muqattam, a peripheral Cairo slum, founding a primary school and providing scavengers with vehicles to haul garbage. She eventually attracted broader attention to their plight, which led to new schools, health care projects and income-generating strategies for the slum dwellers.

Maggie Gobran have helped people in Zabbaleen since 1985, and she has been nominated for the Nobel Prize.