My Dream Stead school, in the sprawling, impoverished Ajegunle
neighbourhood where the Adeosuns live, is one of 40 low-cost
schools in Nigeria's commercial capital that accept recyclable
waste as payment.
For the past four years, a local environmental organisation
called African Cleanup Initiative has been collecting bottles,
cans, drink cartons and plastic containers brought into the
schools by parents and selling them to recyclers.
The proceeds of the sales pay for teacher salaries, children's
uniforms, books and pens, among other expenses.
The scheme aims to reduce the number of children out of school
as well as the amount of rubbish on the streets of Lagos, said
Alexander Akhigbe, founder of the environmental group.
Tuition fees at My Dream Stead stand at $130 per year and the
school is expanding into a second apartment block to accommodate
its 120 pupils. Only seven children were enrolled when it opened
in 2019.
Some mornings, Fatimoh and Fawas walk to the school together
with bulging sacks of rubbish over their shoulders. The waste is
weighed on school premises and its sales value added to Fawas'
account.
"Sometimes if he wants to buy sportswear, the school will tell
me the amount I need to bring," said Fatimoh, a 48-year-old
hairdresser who cares for six children on her own.
Providing for Fawas, the youngest, has been particularly
difficult since she was forced to vacate the room she used as a
salon in 2018.
"When I discovered that they could collect the plastics from me
to keep my child in school, it made my burden lighter," she said
as she scoured bins on the streets for recyclables on her way
back from the school.
(Reporting by Seun Sanni in LagosWriting by Sofia
ChristensenEditing by Matthew Lewis)
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