The play was co-developed during a five-day workshop (6th-10th November 2023) which took place at the Dandora Transformation League building. Dandora is the location of one of the largest waste dumps in Africa. On Thursday, the waste pickers visited the Dandora dumpsite where they performed for the first time in front of their peers. Many took a pause from sorting waste to see their stories reflected in the play. Some joined in. Solomon, a waste picker, and head of the Nairobi recyclable waste association, reflects: “It was empowering to perform in front of fellow waste pickers. It is their stories we are portraying, so they felt heard.”
The finished play was first performed for a public audience on Friday 10th November at the Signature Auditorium, and then for INC-3 delegates on Sunday 12th November at the Trademark Hotel.
The event welcomed a full house of prominent stakeholders to the Plastics treaty: official Member state delegates from around the world, members of the Scientist Coalition, Tearfund, Break Free from Plastics, Mr Green Africa, the Minderoo Foundation, Wiego, the International Alliance of Waste Pickers, WWF and more.
“The third round of negotiations will bring us one step closer to a legally binding instrument to end plastic pollution. As plastic production and waste are projected to almost triple by 2060, and a circular economy for plastics still remains a shiny concept, recycling will remain an integral part of mitigating plastic waste. As waste pickers are responsible for the collection of nearly 60% of recyclables worldwide, it is essential that their voice is well represented in these negotiations. While waste-pickers are doing the ‘dirty work’ so to speak, it is hard for them to obtain a seat at the table. With this event, we created an opportunity for the delegates to hear from those who are most affected by the decisions made at INC-3, and to take this voice forward in the third negotiation round,” says Elena van Doorn from GRID-Arendal.