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Sidiki Mansark “Water is life and we want to bring it to the people”

Sidiki Mansark runs the Water Sie Boys, a cooperative that set up public showers in Kroo Bay slum in Freetown 
Anna Jefferys/IRIN
Sidiki Mansark shows IRIN the Water Sie Boys public shower
Mansark lives and works in Kroo bay slum, in the centre of the capital Freetown, home to 13,000 people, which has two working public water taps. Kroo Bay is littered with rubbish and sewage – many people use the rubbish to reclaim land on which to build ramshackle houses.

There are no pit latrines in the slum; most residents use the beach or one of the few drop toilets constructed on it. On discovering a natural spring in the slum, Mansark decided to set up a cooperative, the Water Sie Boys, to run a public shower for slum-dwellers.

“Here are our two taps. Every day women line up to get water to wash with. They have to lug it far away and there is no privacy for bathing.

“We discovered a spring some years ago and we thought people would use a shower. The spring gives pure water. We saw the people lacking, and we decided to do something about it.

“We used to have a machine to pump water into our containers, but it has been broken for months now, so now we fill up the tanks by hand.

“We are straining, but we are so happy to be helping our community.

“If you want a shower, you pay 3 US cents (100 Leones) and you can take five minutes, or we will give you a bucket of water. People need soap so we started to make it [soap] too.

Sign for the Water Sie Boys' public showers which they run in Kroo Bay slum in central Freetown
Photo: Anna Jefferys/IRIN
“We are 20 working here – but I want to increase the number. We get by – every now and then we have to put in $1.50 to sustain our business. We want to expand it to other zones in the slum. We could employ 40 people because we always have enough customers.

“We don’t have roofing materials and we don’t have money to plaster our showers. The women’s shower is the worst - it is mouldy - but it is not their fault. None of us are trained. I did not know anything about plumbing but now I have learned. There is one plumber in the slum who helps us.

“Now everyone comes to us when they want a shower. We are not rich but water is life, and we want to bring it to the people.

aj/pt

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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