Thanks to your generous support, we are launching a new program in Kathmandu, Nepal for child wastepickers! We first performed a site visit in January 2015, but unfortunately, a major earthquake decimated Kathmandu shortly thereafter. Our efforts switched to disaster relief instead. Years later, we are happy to report that we are in a position to start a program for wastepickers again.
Wastepickers in Nepal
In Kathmandu, Nepal, dire poverty forces thousands of people to make a living from picking through rubbish along roadsides, in rivers, streams and drainages, and in garbage dumps. These wastepickers sell materials such as plastic, metal, cloth, and paper that they have collected to various recycling companies. It’s a hand-to-mouth existence, earning barely enough to feed their family.
In spite of their important role, wastepickers – most of them women and children – lack formal acceptance in the official Municipal Waste Management system of Kathmandu. Women are especially vulnerable and exposed to numerous inequalities and health risks.
Project Staff
Our effort in Nepal will be led by Shalini Puri and Shailaja (Sally) Brady.
Feel free to reach out to them directly if you are interested in volunteering at shalini.puri@unforgotten.org and/or sally.brady@unforgotten.org
Partnerships and Stakeholders
The Unforgotten Fund (UNFF) will partner with the Partnership for Sustainable Development (PSD) in Nepal to organize a series of programs aimed to address the needs of wastepickers in Kathmandu. PSD is a local Nepalese charity that shares our vision to eliminate extreme poverty by empowering the most vulnerable.
The aim of this partnership and the resulting program is to provide wastepickers, particularly children and their mothers, with sustainable skills that can help them achieve better standards of living through formal education, vocational, and practical work skills training.
Projects
The program will target 15 child wastepickers from Kathmandu initially, with plans to expand in the future. Formal and non-formal education will be provided for these children at schools; as well as a chance for ‘catch-up education.’ In addition to schooling, these children will be given a midday meal, assisting in improving their nutrition and enabling them to better concentrate on their studies while also providing an incentive for attendance.
In addition to the children, women and adolescents from the children’s families will be provided with opportunities to begin skills training courses that will help them find ways to earn a living away from the dumpsite. Along with the training, the program will assist them in finding suitable employment or establishing their own small business once they have graduated from the skills training course. Additionally, we plan to train mothers to be more aware of safety, hygiene, reproductive health, and nutrition. They will also be encouraged to join together in group saving schemes to create welfare funds for times of need, and to help save for their children’s future.
Finally, we will be working to raise awareness of the needs and rights of wastepicking communities. We will be ensuring the community itself knows what rights it has and how to access them. Through various community workshops, the UNFF and PSD will work with the children and their families to help them understand the importance of education, health, hygiene, citizen rights, and raise awareness on the impact of drugs and sexual abuse.
Funding
Funding will help to cover all expenses for the children’s education and living expenses until the age of 16. Those older than 16 will be funded to attend skills training courses. Additional vocational and skills training will be targeted to the older children. This training will be designed and organized to assist these youths in generating income and running their own independent businesses to help improve their quality of life and assist them in getting off the streets.
Currently, we are working on selecting the children who will be part of this initial program phase. The aim is to have an even divide of boys and girls.
Personal Stories
Some of the prospective children for the program have shared these stories with staff on the ground. All of these wastepickers want to enroll in school like other children and to have the freedom to be children without the responsibility of earning income to help support their families. However, they are all currently dependent on waste picking to ensure that their families’ basic needs are met. The UNFF and PSD want to help these children and uplift their family without losing out on their rights and opportunities for education.
Abdhesh from Kathmandu
“Hello, I am Addhesh, I don’t know my age. I live under the pool of Balaju with my grandparents. My grandparents go to new road everyday in the morning at 7AM and come back home at 7PM. All they do is sit in the roadside of the new road area and beg for money and food with pedestrians. They do not know that I pick waste while they are not at home. With bunch of my friends who live nearby, we go to collect electronic waste from the riverside dumping zone. I barely find any in my whole 5-6 hour of search. Luckily, when I find any electronic waste, I get paid from the leader of the waste collector of my area. My earnings are not guaranteed sometimes I earn nothing and sometimes I earn Rs 50-100 (50 cents to $1 USD) in a day. I really wish to help my grandparents to sustain our lives. I don’t like to see them begging.”
Sarita from Kathmandu
“Hello, my name is Sarita and I am 12 years old. I live in a one room with my 3 siblings and a single mother. We dine, sleep, cook, and study in the same room. My house is not really in good condition, we live in the building which isn’t well maintained thus its cheap for us to afford. Every day I wake up at 5:30 in the morning to start waste picking. I walk for 40 minutes to get started with my work every day. I search for valuable scrap from the pile of garbage to give it to the nearby recycling company. I come home by 9AM. Then I help my mother with the daily chores. Monthly I get NPR 800 ($6.75 USD) from the recycling company which I give it to my mother. She maintains our livelihood from the same income. I used to study in a government school but because of the pandemic I don’t go to school anymore. I want to go back to my school and study.”
Jangmo from Kathmandu
“Hi, I am a waste picker from Kirtipur. Every day in the morning and evening time, I collect the waste (only cardboard papers and plastic bags) from the road, dumping site, dustbins, garbage area and give back to the master. I don’t have good clothes to wear and while collecting items, my clothes become dirty because of which people often calls me by names which I don’t like. I often share this to my mother who works at the master’s company. She tells me, once I grow up, I wouldn’t have to collect wastes, and everyone will start respecting me. This gives me hope to wake up every day and work. I wish to grow up soon.”
Dipendra from Kathmandu
“Hello, my name is Dipendra, I know little English because I have studied up to 5 standards. I love studying, my favorite subject is Science, but unfortunately my father left my mom and since then we have been abandoned by our relatives as well. None helped us. My mother have an illness because of which she cannot work much. She usually stays alone and sad. I didn’t know how could I make things a little better for her until one uncle helped me to find the recycle house. I go there every day from morning 9AM to 6PM and separate different types of waste. I have to climb up in the ladder of waste and separate it. Often the smell gives me bad headache, but it I have adapted slowly. I earn 3,000 Rs ($25 USD) a month which helps me to pay the rent of our house and food. I like to see other people in my community while they are going to school; they don’t talk with me because they think I am not right person to be friends with. The best part of my day is when I get to sleep in my mother’s arm.”
Mendo from Kathmandu
“I am Mendo, I am 15 years old. I have been waste picking from 5 years now. Every morning I carry a sack on my back and start looking for tin, alumni item. I walk for 4-5 hours every day in search of these items. Sometimes I walk to different district in search of these items. I like days when there are less heat because due to sun and hot weather my working speeds slows down and because of that I cannot fill the sack. I get paid according to the weight of my products. On good days I find 5kgs of tins and aluminum and on bad days I don’t get any. Per kg I get 10 Rs (10 US cents). I save this money for myself. I wish one day my savings can be helpful for my sister’s disability.”
Your Donation Will Help!
If you wish to contribute to this program, please click on the button below. Your donation will go directly and entirely towards projects. None of your donation will go towards administrative expenses, fundraising, or overhead.