By
Andrew Cawthorne
NAIROBI: Drayton Maina looks sharp
behind the wheel of his car in a grey suit, colourful tie and shiny leather
shoes.
It would be hard to tell that the
Kenyan driver — like millions of his fellow Africans — is dressed from
head-to-toe in second-hand clothes brought in from the West.
“The only thing you can’t get in a
Kenyan second-hand market is a wife!” he jokes, picking out a fleecy top to
counter Nairobi’s morning chill for a mere 200 shillings ($2.64) at the vast
Gikomba street market.
Maina
is proud to tot up the modest cost of his smart work attire: wide-collared suit
500 shillings, white shirt 150, cartoon tie 100, black leather shoes 800.
Despite widespread poverty across
the east African nation of 32 million people, that sort of price is affordable
for many and underpins the roaring success in the last two decades of the
second-hand clothes trade known in local Swahili as “mitumba.”
Popular as the clothes may be among
the poor, Kenya’s mitumba explosion has annoyed many in the former British
colony.
Textile manufacturers say it has
helped decimate their industry, while cotton-growers are equally aggrieved.
And the mass use of second-hand
Western clothes has given a sometimes drab look to Kenyan streets — at least in
the capital Nairobi, where colourful traditional African dress is rare.
Shipped into Kenya in enormous
quantities, vast piles of clothes are shifted at Gikomba, a teeming labyrinth of
makeshift stalls, boxes, carts and barrows full of clothes and shoes in a
densely-populated, pot-holed suburb of Nairobi.
Many of the sellers sit on top of
their wares, as buyers rummage through the garments. Some clothes are sold by
item, others by weight. Bargain boxes sell women’s underwear and children’s
clothes at 20 shillings an item.
Many come to Gikomba to pick up
large quantities to take out to the countryside and sell on at smaller markets.
Middlemen buy the clothes in bags
known as “bales” from a handful of major importers who draw on charity stores,
out-of-date stocks or over-runs in the West or in Asia.
Most importers and middlemen are
reluctant to talk about the exact origin of the clothes, whether they pay for
them and whether the donors are aware that the clothes are sold on again.
Some people in the business believe
traders get the clothes for free by saying they will be donated to poor people
in developing nations. Others think they pay a nominal fee to charities, or to
Western firms to take seconds off their hands.
Jas Bedi, chairman of the Kenya
Association of Manufacturers’ textile and apparel group, says the mitumba
industry is exploiting goodwill in richer countries.
“People in Europe and America have
sent clothes in good faith to Africa for the under-privileged and the poor, not
to be turned into business by unscrupulous traders.”
The source of the clothes may be as
muddled as Gikomba’s market but all agree that the clothes are prized.
“Everyone prefers mitumba in
Kenya,” said John Omare, 25, next to his pile of boys’ T-shirts in Gikomba.
“This is one of the largest open-air markets in east Africa. The mitumba
industry is feeding a lot of mouths.”
Bedi estimates the mitumba trade
employs some 30,000 people. That dwarfs the 12,000 left in the formal textile
industry, which used to employ around 100,000 in the 1970s and 1980s.
In that heyday, Bedi says, there
were some 100 major factories, compared to 7 or 8 now. Cheap Asian imports also
played their part in the decline but mitumba gets most blame.