MoonKi
You can be smallish and rather frivolous. I think I have had it and now lets go.
I notice your near derogatory reference to "International tender". Looks like your problem is "International". Perhaps you want it limited to a national tender or better still - "tribal tender"? We know where similar "National" and "Tribal" tenders took the Kenya Railways or is it the Rift Valley Railways?
You should demand to know my reasons for asking for an international tender rather than resorting to mockery and innuendo. Better still come up with better ideas. I mean better than hiring a few poor people to colect your garbage and calling that a solution for the entire Nairobi. Many people are drowning under the weight of uncollected garbage - even though they have paid for the disposal of the same.
Of course I too have my garbage collected but do have to clean around my own compound not to mention inside. Who told you some "internationals" will come to clean your garbage because "locals" can't do it.
By advertising something internationally, it does not lock out locals or "non Internationals", so there is no reason for tears, weeping, cheap nationalism or mockery.
The objective of such a wide tender is to obtain the best deal. We have seen subterfuge at work with advertisements hidden from view all to go through the motions of fulfilling the legal requirements.
At worst Nairobians should continue to pay what is already collected by the county for water and sewage. At best Nairobians should see real gains and profit from their garbage. This can come in form of power generation (from wood and other combustible materials); Biogas; Recycling of plastics, metal, glass and soil. Some of the garbage can be sold. For example Britain exports tons of its garbage to Denmark and Sweden where it it used for heating. There is a market for it. There is money to make from garbage and Nairobians should benefit from it by sharing the profits with the garbage collecting firm. Need I go in to the environmental benefits of this arrangement? If done properly, Nairobi could "sell" carbon credits to polluters and make a real killing to ease the burden of tax and improve the infrastructure.
These things cannot be done by your two flea-beaten workers who clean after you. This is a complex solution to cover the entire Nairobi. Of course if you bothered to read what I wrote earlier (something you confessed to not reading at all), you would seen not just an outline of the garbage collection, recycling and cash and resource generation but plans for the daily cleaning of the city. In fact I mean
washing of the roads and pavements.
Now let me remind you that right now as we speak, there is an army of persons employed to collect garbage. In fact those jobs have been shifting from parent to child even before independence. They are the ones I referred to as "broom leaning" rubble. There are also hundreds of ghost cleaners, earning money for work not done. Nairobi is not dirty because it has not employed enough cleaners. There more cleaners than are needed. Otherwise we would hear of such a shortage and send failed graduate police recruitment applicants over there.
What I suggested and have done it before, is that these human beings should be deployed elsewhere if they cannot be laid off. In their place, we should have machines. Big motorised vacuum cleaners. It is nothing new in Kenya. Road builders have some of them which they use to clean sweep their roads while under construction. By my estimate one machine can work the entire CBD in one night.
There is nowhere I have suggested that a company that secures the contract herd in foreigners to clean our garbage as you now insinuate rather cleverly. The country has laws on who can work. Even if it is a foreign company, it is Kenyans who will end up doing the job. May be a Kenyan company will outbid everybody, who knows? I would rather you expended your energy in questioning the one-sided mass migration of Indians to Kenya while no Kenyan is allowed to migrate to India. Advocate for bilateral agreement.
Lastly, feel free to float an international tender for the cleaning of your neighborhood. I hope there will be takers. I did not have in mind such simple work.
Perhaps the idea is too complex for you. You are comfortable with smaller local ideas.
That is interesting. Presumably the government and agencies that collect taxes would, if they were competent, be employing people to do the job properly. And presumably those people would be Kenyans/Nairobians trained and equipped to do the job? Or did you have it mind that the bureaucrats themselves should come out of their offices and do the work? Here, where I live, we don't have a filth problem, and the people who do the collection and cleaning are also people who live in the city but employed do such work; nobody would dream of international tenders for such work.