Credit: Natalija Gormalova via Visura
Asset ID: VA70121
Caption: Available
Creator's Statement: Available
Copyright: © Natalija Gormalova, 2024
Collection:
Location: Ghana
Topics:
Documentary
Human Rights
Journalism
Photography
Photojournalism
Portraiture
Womens Rights
Youth
KAYAYEI SISTERS
Since the 80’s teenage girls have been migrating from Ghana’s northern regions to the capital Accra in search of employment opportunities to escape poverty, early marriage and conflict in their villages.
Many of these young women have no formal education and on their arrival to Accra often end up working as kayayei (female head porters). For long hours in the sweltering heat, the kayayei carry goods on their heads throughout Accra’s busy markets for as little as few cedis a day (less than a dollar). Some loads weigh more than 120 pounds and the kayayie need to do a lot of trips a day to survive.
It is estimated there are more than 160,000 kayayei in Accra.
Rahina came to Accra from the Northern Region almost 5 years ago, as there was no work for her in the North. Despite the back breaking labor and hardships she faces every day, she continues working in Accra to send money to her family back in the North. Many kayayei women have no family in the city, and without a place to stay they end up sleeping at night in the market. That makes them extremely vulnerable to gender- based violence, including rape and its potential consequences, such as unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion. Rahina used to sleep in the market but later moved to Accra’s largest slum Agbogbloshie to share one room with another 10 kayayei girls. Agbogbloshie, sometimes referred by locals as “Sodom and Gomorrah” is one of the world’s largest electronic waste burning sites and one of the most toxic places in the world. Residents of Agbogbloshie face serious health threats from breathing in toxic fumes from burning e-waste.