By Mazen Aziz
Egypt
is one of the most modern countries in the Middle East and Africa. Cairo is the capital city of Egypt, which has
some of the finest hospitals, shops, restaurants and all the trappings of
modern life in the area. However, Egypt has a lot of hidden secrets that no one
talk about either from officials or tourists because it’s never shown to them.
Egypt and particularly Cairo got so many mega slum areas that are actually
ranked in the top 10 most populated areas in the world. Manshiet Nasser or the
“Rubbish City” is one of the top mega slum areas in Cairo with about 600,000 to
1 million people.
Cairo
has a population of 16 to 20 million people living in it. A survey shows that
200 US dollars is the average income a month but found that 68% of those
canvassed made less than 143 dollars. Moreover, the extremely poor make less
than 20 dollar a month. In Manshiet Nasser, 50 dollars a month is the average
and many wage rates much lower with gradations of poverty. Egyptians call
Manshiet Nasser the Garbage City since the Coptic Christians who works as
garbage men (the Zabbaleen) in Mokattam area collect the majority of garbage
all over Cairo and bring it back beside their homes. The Zabbaleen children and
mothers will then try to go through the garbage all day and find pieces they
can resell. Those people consider lucky, as they are able to make some sort of
subsistence living. However, by the years, with all that amount of garbage
beside the houses got spread all over the area and became uncontrollable.
Ezbet
Bekhit is another typical neighborhood in Manshiet Nasser. The average income
is 50 dollars and the average gross floor space per person is 6.2 square
meters. You will be lucky to have a cook stove or a bed, although few do. There
is little light or electricity and even less drinkable water. Moreover,
officials said the attitude to the slums is summed up by a response to some in
a better area complaining about no drinking water. "Hussein
Fadl, vice chairman of the municipal water department in Cairo’s Giza district,
says such an expansion is planned, but delivery of the treated water will
remain a problem. As a stopgap measure for Saft al-Laban, the neighborhood will
be temporarily connected to adjacent districts by sets of new pipes by
November." “You won’t hear them crying after that,” said Fadl. “These
neighborhoods grew up by themselves, like cancer cells, and we are trying to
keep up.”
Aribar
we Noz, which means “4 ½” is a darker and more poverty-stricken area in
Manshiet Nasser. Its called Aribar we Noz as a reference to its size of the
inner slum of slums in Manshiet Nasser. Aribar we Noz is where the Sudanese
ended up after escaping the Darfur genocide. The Egyptian government couldn’t
stop them from coming in but they do stop any services reaching them but also
putting them in a 4 ½ square kilometer space. Egyptian tour guide Carlos said, “The Zabaleen
are very poor. Many here are in poverty but they are able to at least maintain
their poverty with their jobs. The poorest of the poor are the Sudanese
refugees. Most of them have nothing. Actually, I have a friend who works with
them.”
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