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Why is Kigali so clean and orderly?

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By SUNNY BINDRA
Posted  Friday, June 10  2011 at  16:31

After years of procrastination, I finally made it to Kigali recently.

I had, of course, heard what you have all heard: that it is an African city that is clean and orderly. I was, of course, sceptical.

Seeing is believing. Even so, the evidence of my own eyes was hard to believe. The roads and pavements of Kigali are spotless.

Forget about plastic bags, which are banned: you would struggle even to find scraps of paper or food lying around.

How can this be, I asked myself? How can this city pull this off, this feat that most cities in Africa and Asia patently cannot?

So I set off on foot around Kigali — to observe for myself, to talk to the ordinary people and not just the policy-makers.

Here’s what I saw: people simply do not litter. They don’t step out of their doorways and throw stuff out on the street.

They don’t toss things out of their cars like imbeciles. Even children in schools seem to dispose of things properly.

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Example from the top

So why don’t they? There are many reasons. First and foremost is the example from the top. President Paul Kagame places great emphasis on personal and community discipline.

He leads by example, making it mandatory for all Rwandese to participate in a community clean-up day once a month. He comes out himself to do it with the people. He sets the standard.

Second reason: a sense of value has grown around personal hygiene at the ‘‘cellular’’ level.

The need for cleanliness has been taught in grassroots communities, in schools, in village barazas, in city districts.

Community leaders have been selected to guide and enforce compliance.

People who break the code feel a sense of shame and the weight of castigation by their local peers — not just law enforcers.

Third reason: all households are required to build waste disposal pits and basic hygiene facilities.

Civic bodies organise larger waste disposal. Dustbins, latrines and other disposal facilities are everywhere. So you don’t have any real excuse to be a litterbug.

In short, Kigali is clean because that is the example its leaders set; because an effort has been made to ingrain the value of cleanliness at the grassroots level; because facilities are provided; and because enforcement is not compromised.

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