Environment News Service (ENS)
ENS logo

Garbage Dump Second Home for Iraqi Children

By Barham Omar

SULAIMANIYAH, Iraq, March 31, 2006 (ENS) - Every day before school, seven year old Mohammed Fariq Rostam goes with his father on their donkeys to scrounge through Sulaimaniyah's garbage dump.

Mohammed's eyes often burn from the smoke that rises from the rubbish, and his forehead bears a scar from when he slipped on trash and sliced it on a piece of glass.

But he is proud when he helps his father find a source of income for their five member family. That could be aluminium cans that they can resell in the market, or a piece of electrical equipment that has been thrown away but can be repaired. Shoes and clothes, though torn or stained, are also prized.

"This isn't a place for him," said Mohammed’s father Fariq, 31, who is illiterate and unemployed. "I want him to have a better future."

The dump lies in an industrial area 11 kilometers southwest of Sulaimaniyah city, near seven villages that are home to more than 100 families. It has become a source of income for many like the Rostams who are out of work and looking for anything that can be resold or reused.

Zereen Abdullah, 12, sloshes through garbage with a pair of muddy boots - one of her many finds. She has rashes all over her body from the trash that itches her skin, but triumphantly announces, "I have found three dolls, and whenever I go home I play with them."

child

Kurdish child (Photo courtesy Middle East Information Center)
Mohammed and Zereen have missed out on the economic prosperity enjoyed by Sulaimaniyah following the fall of the Baathist regime and the end of crippling economic sanctions.

New construction abounds and the Kurdish regional government has dreams that oil rich Iraqi Kurdistan could one day resemble Dubai.

But while Sulaimaniyah is booming, its outskirts remain poor and badly served by municipal services.

Parents in the area close to the dump criticize the government for not providing basic services for their children such as kindergartens, parks or a playground. Their relatives do not visit, they say, because of the stench of the rubbish heap, which clings to their clothes even when they return.

For local children, though, the dump is an a big attraction, so much so that some say they dream of becoming garbage workers when they grow up - much to the consternation of parents, who they want more for their families.

"Our children have nowhere to go during vacations except this garbage dump," said Parween Muhammed, 48.

Sulaimaniyah officials have tried to discourage the scavengers, but as the dump is not barricaded, they cannot prevent people from sifting through the garbage.

"We started arresting them, but it didn't work," said Rizgar Ahmad, head of public services for the municipality.

The scavengers use iron hooks to rip the trash bags, which some municipal worker workers say have been used to threaten them. "They threw stones at my bulldozer, and when I got angry at them, they came with their hooks," said Sardar Ibrahim. "They were about to kill us."

Sulaimaniyah

Founded in 1789, Sulaimaniyah is a trade center inhabited by Kurds and has long been a center of Kurdish nationalism. (Photo courtesy Andrew)
Talar Midhat is a mental health researcher with the Dutch nongovernmental organization ACORN in Sulaimaniyah, which helps children with disabilities. She said poverty drives the children to the dump and called on NGOs and the government to push for greater protection of children's rights and ensure that they attend school.

She said the few services available for children are in the center of the city, but the agency providing them, the Ministry of Social Affairs, has a poor record in this part of Sulaimaniyah. "So you can imagine its [effectiveness] outside of the city," said Midhat.

Responding to questions about the rubbish dump children, Shno Shiekh Latif, Kurdish minister of labor and social affairs in Sulaimaniyah, insisted that poverty is declining daily in the region. "We certainly have a wide reaching project to help families so they don't need to send their children to work," he said.

NGOs, meanwhile, say there is little they can do to aid the garbage scavengers.

Bakhtyar Kakan Salih, who heads Kurdistan Save the Children's Kaziway Sarshaqam Educational Centre, said, “ We can only give them moral support."

{Published in cooperation with the Institute for War and Peace Reporting.}

 

New Air Quality Laws Require One-Third Less Air Pollution in London Within 18 Months Conservation Program Changes Would Help Wyoming Ranchers Improve Wildlife Habitat, Keep Species Off Endangered List OpenSRI to Launch the First Collaborative Web Platform on Socially Responsible Investments Knowledge Leaders to Provide Tools to Increase Capacity, Strengthen Practice and Build Competitive Advantage at the Ethical Sourcing Forum Europe Honda Launches Auto-Max Railcar Fleet: More environmentally-responsible product distribution with industry-first fleet Five Years Later, Rouge Remains Touchstone for 'Green' Projects Around the World GREEN LOG Home & Lifestyle Awards Announces Winners In Web's First Dedicated, Eco-Social Awards Americans Wary of Environmental Consequences of Fossil Fuels Ford, University of Michigan Develop New Mobility and Transportation Options for the Future Armenia Tree Project Micro-Enterprise Program Recognized as National Winner of Energy Globe Award for Sustainability Clearing the Air on Tejon Ranch and the California Condor
WW TRANSMIT
 

License ENS News
for websites and newsletters

Send a news story to ENS editors

Upload environmental news videos

Share ENS stories with the world