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Ghanaian Fashion Accessory Is Plastic Fantastic

Issue 322
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Minerals Minister Accused of Receiving Kick Backs In The Six Figure Number

President Riyale Names 6 New Regions + 16 New Districts

Mohamed Yusuf Resigns As NEC Chairman

Somali PEN Calls On Somaliland Government To Lift Its New Restrictions On Press Freedom

UAE Dispatches Relief Supplies To Somaliland

Think Tanks Converge In Addis To Discuss Peace Building

Commonwealth Parliamentarians meeting concludes in London with observers from Somaliland

Puntland oil row: Examining the explorations of a corrupted authority

The Ones That Stayed Behind: The Untold Story Of The Human Shields

AfriAfrican Examples
Doctor’s vital duty to save Africa

Somaliland: The country that disappeared

A Vision Of Somaliland

Mutual interests should guide Tanzania relationship with other countries

United States Honors Eight Female Champions of Human Rights

Regional Affairs

Education hearings at the House of Elders in Somaliland

Somali Islamic Militants: Happy To Be On US List Of Terrorist Organizations

Warlords Turn To Ivory Trade To Fund Slaughter Of Humans

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Glasgow Man Treated For Drug Resistant TB

PMR Parliament to take Foreign Minister to task for diplomatic failures

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Djibouti: St Tropez In The Horn?

Better Deal For Somalis Who Send Money Home

Guards For African Leaders Battle; Dozen Injured

Dad Pleads For Son's Killer To Turn Himself In

Ghanaian Fashion Accessory Is Plastic Fantastic

Obama Campaign Sparks Local Somalis' Interest In Election

Father Sells Daughter For Qat Money

Food for thought

Opinions

Why I Chose To Live The Hard Way In The USA?

I Do Not Know Why I Do Not Know

What Type Of A Leader Are We Searching For In Somaliland?

The Vortex Leadership Issue of Somalia

Future of Somalia?... After Somaliland’s recognition

Double standard policies of funding agencies ( The case of Somaliland Red crescents Society)


 

Bags are made from plastic discarded on the streets of Accra

By Tristan McConnell in Accra

Accra, March 18, 2008 – “Our bags are complete trash" may not strike you as the perfect sales pitch. But one Ghanaian entrepreneur would beg to disagree. His Trashy Bags venture is turning the scourge of discarded plastic that litters this corner of west Africa into a cool fashion accessory.

Plastic bags are a ubiquitous feature of the African landscape not seen in coffee table books or travel magazines. In Ghana they line roads, hang from palm trees, float in the sea and gather in drifts on the white sandy beaches. In Ghana's capital, Accra, they clog the sewers that run alongside roads turning gutters into stinking repositories of stagnant water and faeces and prime breeding grounds for malaria-carrying mosquitoes.

Looking around the city, a businessman Kwabena Osei Bonsu decided something needed to be done. "I wanted to come up with an idea that would solve problems in my lifetime," he said. His solution? Collect the discarded plastic bags and stitch them together to make new, reusable bags.

In the Trashy Bags workshop a dozen tailors and seamstresses sit at manual sewing machines stitching together old plastic sachets. In west Africa tap water is not fit to drink so millions of half-litre "pure water" sachets costing only the equivalent of 2p are discarded by thirsty consumers every day. A storage room overflows with more than three million sachets that have been collected and cleaned ready for recycling.

In Accra, a small city of 2.2 million people, up to 60 tones of plastic packaging is dumped on the streets every day, a figure that has risen by 70 per cent over the past decade. "This menace of plastic waste has taken over our entire nation," said Sandra Wilson, a Ghanaian environmentalist, "it pollutes our soils, chokes our drains, breeds malaria and is unsightly".

Local people arrive at the Trashy Bags workshop carrying sacks stuffed with thousands of the sachets on their heads. They exchange 1,000 sachets for £2 – good money in a country where the average person earns only £254 a year.

"I collect sachets because I am jobless and this gives me money," said Hadiza Ishmael, a 55-year-old grandmother who had just arrived with 4,000 sachets. "It also makes the place look nicer."

Momentum is building to fight the blight of plastic bags globally. Plastic bags are banned or face restriction in Zanzibar, Rwanda, Somaliland, Tanzania, South Africa and Uganda. Modbury in Devon became the first European town to ban the issuing of plastic bags last year, and San Francisco the first American city. Paris and London are expected to follow suit.

Trashy Bags was launched in December last year, and so far has collected seven million used sachets from the streets, and sold more than 6,000 bags. Small recycled handbags sell for £4.

Source: Independent,   UK


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