News
Vendors make a killing selling water to thirsty Kajiado Town
Donkeys being used to fetch the precious commodity. PHOTO/ FILE
Posted Monday, March 16 2009 at 20:48
In Summary
- Some boreholes have dangerous chemicals but residents have no alternative sources
Water scarcity is probably the biggest headache for residents of Kajiado town, most of who are spending more money on it than food.
Ironically this scarcity has opened money making opportunities for many people in the town and the surrounding areas, who are now selling water for a living.
Trade in water is perhaps the most lucrative business in the town and has attracted both the rich and the ordinary folk.
Anyone with water to sell has a ready market as residents buy the commodity without complaining about the high prices or the source.
The affluent have drilled boreholes and bought tankers to transport water to thirsty individuals and institutions while the ordinary vendors are using hand carts, bicycles and wheelbarrows to transport it from the boreholes to homes at between Sh20 and Sh30 for a 20-litre container.
The town has five private boreholes and at least 20 water tankers of various sizes which are always supplying water to the growing population while hundreds of young people have invested in hand-carts and bicycles which they are using to transport water from the boreholes to consumers at a fee.
Selling charcoal
Enterprising Maasai women who previously earned a living by selling charcoal have abandoned that trade and are using their donkeys to ferry water from boreholes and shallow wells in the villages for sale in Kajiado town.
All the water vendors interviewed confirmed that indeed, they are making a fortune.
“One donkey carries 80 litres at a time,” Mama Sintaloi ene Kimiti, who supplies water to civil servants in government quarters and council houses at the district headquarters, said.
“With my three donkeys, I make Sh200 per trip,” she said. She is able to make at least five trips in a day.
She says that the water crisis in the town is a blessing for her and about 100 other women from her village who are today major suppliers to residents who cannot buy it in bulk either because they cannot afford or due to lack of storage facilities.
A mother of four, Ms Sintaloi says she is able to feed, clothe and educate her children without straining financially. Unlike previous years, she was able to pay school fees at once for her first born child, who is in form three at a local secondary school.
The other mothers who have joined the trade tell similar stories of how their lives have improved since the water crisis hit Kajiado town sometime last year.
The chairman of the Intinyika community, Mr Jonathan Manang’oi, says the women no longer struggle to pay the Sh200 monthly fee at the bore hole.
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Submitted by SJ502Posted March 17, 2009 10:00 PM
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Submitted by SJ502
Kajiado town suffers from poor urban planning, corrupt council and excessive politicking. The distorted and unsustainable abstraction practices that are threatening urban dwellers and the surrounding environment are a function of procrastination than natural catastrophe. The sun-baked rural are able to supply this town with water from shallow indigenous wells yet detailed water reports by a Dutch ASAL NGO abound in the district HQ. The water dept. and the local politicians need to pull in one direction to resolve current water crisis...a tall order to ask in this conservative town.
Posted March 17, 2009 02:12 AM




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(Water is a very dear topic and you will excuse me) In the picture, the 12 containers carried by the 3 donkeys are a serious health hazard too. Inside every one of them is some 'greenish' stuff at the bottom as they're never cleaned. It's a weird no disease outbreak has ever been reported... anyone listening out there?