Monday, September 17, 2012

Sunday Globe Special: Trashing Egypt's New President

"Egypt’s garbage crisis bedevils new president; Ban on pigs that eat waste leaves city overflowing" by Ernesto Londoño  |  Washington Post, September 02, 2012

CAIRO — To understand why garbage is piling up on Cairo’s streets, it helps to pay a visit to Atel Shenouda’s clandestine pigpen.

Ensconced on the rooftop of his five-story apartment building in the predominantly Christian district of Zaraib in Cairo, the 43-year-old trash collector’s hogs rummage through a smattering of discarded vegetables and other organic waste.

Pigs used to play a central role in this city’s rudimentary waste management system. But since a 2009 health code outlawed the practice of owning pigs that feed on garbage, just a few illicit pigs like Shenouda’s have been doing their work in hiding — and the trash has been stacking up, a problem that has worsened since the 2011 revolution.

The country’s new Islamist president, Mohamed Morsi, has vowed to tackle the mess during his first 100 days in office. The ambitious agenda he set out in June also includes easing Cairo’s anarchic traffic, improving the quality and quantity of bread, and restoring security.

But the country’s first democratically elected president ­inherited a country with a ­tanking economy and dilapidated infrastructure — problems that are magnified by Egypt’s suddenly empowered electorate.

His early promises have become a trial by fire for the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group that propelled Morsi to victory, as it seeks to transition from an oppressed political underdog to the nation’s ruling party.

‘‘Citizens are observing and waiting for things to change,’’ said Amr Sobhy, 24, one of the founders of Morsi Meter, a nonpartisan website that is tracking progress on the 64 issues Morsi vowed to address during his first 100 days on the job. ‘‘It’s definitely a good sign.’’

More than 50 days into Morsi’s term, the website’s owners give him credit for meeting just one of the 64 promises: launching a media campaign urging Egyptians to litter less. They say 14 promises are in progress but proffer little optimism about the prospect of gleaming streets in the next six weeks.

‘‘I don’t see a very tangible change on that issue,’’ said Sobhy, who voted for Morsi and said he takes pride in keeping his president accountable.  

Oh, do I ever know how the Egyptians feel!

Those who have been hauling trash in this megametropolis for decades are less diplomatic in their assessment.

‘‘One hundred days?’’ scoffed Shehata Iskandar, the head of trash collectors in the Motamadeya neighborhood of the capital, where ordinary residents sort through mounds of trash in search of recyclables they can trade in for cash. ‘‘Not even 100 months.’’   

We call it an income enhancement program here.

See: Globe's Bottle Bill Burp

No excuse.

Garbage in Cairo has traditionally been collected by the Zabbaleen, a community of Coptic Christians who for decades made the city’s waste their livelihood.  

See: Egypt's Garbage Dump

After sorting out organic waste from glass and plastic, the trash collectors sold the recyclable goods to national and international companies. Pigs, once omnipresent in predominantly Christian neighborhoods, would eat the rest. When the animals were fat, they were sent to slaughterhouses that catered to hotels.

That could lead to contagion.

In the spring of 2009, alarmed by the outbreak of swine flu in Mexico, Egyptian authorities ordered the immediate slaughter of all pigs in the country.  

Related: Egypt's Pig in a Poke

But hey, it is all worth since pharmaceutical companies benefited from that swindle

Under the watchful eye of police officers, Shenouda and thousands of other pig owners had to drive their own animals to slaughterhouses.

‘‘I felt like they were taking part of my body,’’ he said. ‘‘They were my livelihood.’’

The ban on trash-eating pigs removed a major method of disposal, sparking a crisis in the city of 19 million people. Trash cans are often overflowing and garbage is routinely left on sidewalks and empty lots, resulting in a nauseating smell and attracting rats and flies.
 

Maybe the veil does serve a purpose, 'eh?

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