Informal settlements in cities set to surge as housing crisis bites

09 June 2023 - 09:31 By Nita Bhalla
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now
More than 1-billion people live in urban informal settlements globally.
More than 1-billion people live in urban informal settlements globally.
Image: ANTONIO MUCHAVE

Beatrice Oriyo laughed when asked if there was a playground where her three children could play near her home in Kibera, Nairobi's biggest informal settlement.

"There's nothing like that here," the 34-year-old Oriyo told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from the one-roomed corrugated iron home she rents for 6,000 Kenyan Shillings (R814) a month.

"We don't even have our own toilet. We have to pay to use the public toilets. We bathe in the same room that is our kitchen, living room and bedroom. The idea of a playground here is like a joke," she said.

More than 1-billion people globally reside in overcrowded urban informal settlements such as Kibera, where they live a precarious existence, struggling to access basic amenities such as adequate housing, water, sanitation, power and waste collection, said the UN agency for urban development, UN-Habitat.

This figure is projected to reach 3-billion people by 2050 as populations grow and more people migrate to cities in search of better opportunities, presenting a major challenge for many governments across the world.

UN-Habitat forecasts that 50% of this growth in the populations of informal settlements will be concentrated in Nigeria, the Philippines, Ethiopia, Tanzania, India, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt and Pakistan.

Jackline Bosibori washes laundry in a water puddle in the Kibera informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya. 'I have to carry my clothes here to do my washing. It is tiring but there is nothing I can do,' she says.
Jackline Bosibori washes laundry in a water puddle in the Kibera informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya. 'I have to carry my clothes here to do my washing. It is tiring but there is nothing I can do,' she says.
Image: Reuters/Monicah Mwangi

"Our future is urban," UN-Habitat executive director Maimunah Mohd Sharif told reporters on the sidelines of the UN-Habitat Assembly, a five-day conference bringing together ministers, senior officials and civil society groups to strengthen commitments to develop more sustainable cities.

"More than half the world's population lives in cities and towns. That population is going to increase to 70% by 2050. So tackling urban poverty and inequality is more urgent than ever before," she said.

NO PRIVACY, NO SAFETY

More than half of Kenya's urban population lives in unplanned overcrowded settlements like Kibera, the World Bank said. The warren of narrow dirt-paved alleys is home to at least 250,000 people, most living cheek-by-jowl in windowless one-room shacks.

Most residents are migrants from rural areas and earn less than $2 (about R37) a day in low-income jobs as motorbike taxi drivers, security guards, domestic workers or casual labourers. They are unable to afford decent housing in Nairobi.

Toilets are shared pit latrines which often overflow during the rainy season. There is little piped water so residents rely on expensive and irregular private water tankers to fill their buckets and containers daily.

Poor drainage and rubbish collection mean floods are common, not only destroying homes and possessions, but also contaminating drinking water and causing deaths through building collapses, electrocution and drowning.

With high levels of poverty and youth unemployment, crimes such as mugging, robbery and sexual violence against women are rife.

Residents in informal settlements are also at risk of forced evictions by authorities, and bulldozers moving in to demolish people's homes are common.

"It's not easy to live here," Mercy Achieng, a 41-year-old single mother, who earns 500 shillings (about R68) weekly washing laundry, said by phone from Kibera, a 30-minute drive from the scenic 140-acre manicured grounds of the UN conference in a green, upmarket part of the capital.

"It is a good community and we all know and help one another, but there is no privacy, no safety and no security. The landlord can kick us out, or the bulldozers can come."

UPGRADING

UN-Habitat officials said while lack of housing was previously seen as a problem faced by developing countries, it had become a global crisis with many rich countries such as the US, Britain and Germany also facing shortages.

"The global housing crisis is present in all world regions today," said Edlam Yemeru, head of the knowledge and innovation branch of UN-Habitat.

"Although the manifestations differ, almost all countries are grappling with the urgency to ensure their citizens have access to adequate housing."

Data from the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development shows costs of housing have risen faster than earnings and inflation in many member states in recent years.

Kenyan President William Ruto, who came to power last year, has made affordable housing a centrepiece of his government's development agenda and announced plans to construct 250,000 houses annually for low income-earners, including those in informal settlements like Kibera.

"Realising more than half of Kenya's population will live in urban areas by 2050, we have integrated universal housing as a critical pillar of the national bottom-up economic transformation agenda," Ruto told delegates at the UN-Habitat Assembly on Monday.

He said this would include green buildings, green spaces, adoption of low carbon energy, including low carbon transport solutions, as well as urban agriculture and effective waste management.

But the financing of the affordable housing programme, which would impose a 3% levy on employee salaries with employers contributing the same amount, has been heavily criticised by the opposition and sparked protests by labour unions.

Joseph Muturi, chair of Slum Dwellers International, a network of the urban poor from more than 18 countries, said governments needed to focus on upgrading informal settlements rather than relocating residents to housing projects outside cities.

Previous examples of moving families from informal settlements to poorly serviced new housing schemes on the fringes of cities had left them isolated, with few job options, and forcing them to eventually move back to the slums, he said.

"You can't relocate slum dwellers far from the cities. They have the right to participate as citizens of these cities just like everyone else," said Muturi.

"When you relocate people, you are also killing the social fabric these communities have woven over decades. The best solution is in-situ upgrading of slums. You have to engage with slum dwellers, provide secure tenure and the amenities they need."

The Thomson Reuters Foundation


subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now

Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.