MAKING A LIVING
FROM
RUBBISH IN NICARAGUA
G'day folks,
The largest garbage dump
in all of Central America is home to a tragic community that make their living
from the refuse.
Located in
Nicaragua, the municipal landfill known as La Chureca (slang for “city dump”)
is a massive open dumpster that has attracted a community of extremely
impoverished citizens who came to the land to make a living and simply never
left.
Located on four square miles of land in Managua,
Nicaragua, the huge dump site was established shortly after an earthquake
destroyed a majority of the city in the early 1970’s. The rubble and waste was
brought to the site, creating what is now the largest landfill in Central
America. Soon after it was created impoverished citizens of the nearby areas
began coming to the landfill to see what scraps or valuables they could sift
from the detritus. As the landfill grew, so did the number of scavengers.
While most of the workers reporting to the landfill would
simply arrive for the day and then leave when they had finished, some began to
simply stay at the site, soon growing to a permanent community. Some created
makeshift hovels out of the garbage while others build larger homes complete
with fences and gardens. The group of permanent residents eventually grew to
over a thousand members who would venture out into the sea of trash to look for
valuable pieces of metal or plastic to sell or use in their constructions, or
simply look for food.
At one point, the population of “Churequeros,” as they are
known was almost 50% under the age of eighteen, and lived facing the constant
threats of disease, wild animals, poisons and a host of other terrible
conditions that all came along with living in a garbage dump. Recent years
have seen some improvement with the creation of a processing and recycling
plant which now employs and houses hundreds of the people living on the site.
Clancy's comment: What can I say? It is 2019 isn't it?
I'm ...
We've got a few hidden sites that compete in Oz, Clancy.
ReplyDeleteRecycling has become a disaster in Australia, John, and I have no idea what they will do about it. Less packaging might be a resolution.
DeleteCT