“This farm helps us put food on the table and also provides us with a source of income,” she said. “Without an income, the children would not be in school or have clothes. This farm helps me find produce that I can sell,”
“What makes me happy about this job is that it gives me energy because selling vegetables brings me money and the children live well, they don’t roam in the streets because I am a single parent and I have to take care of all of them,”
Despite the limited opportunities in the camp, Muhawe said she knew very well that “just sitting at home would never help.” She began washing clothes for other families, saving around a thousand Kenyan shillings ($7.18) which she used to start her grocery business.
“I would like to request the agencies to help us with capital money to build a proper shop, and increase our business,” she said as she unloaded her vegetables from a motorcycle, her 4-month-old daughter on her back.
According to a 2018 study by the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the camp’s informal economy generates $56 million annually – with more than 2,000 businesses, including 14 wholesalers.
After a long day at the farm, ploughing fields and managing the cooperative's daily business, Abdulaziz returns to his two-bedroom home, where he has nurtured a spray of colourful flowers to cover parts of the bare corrugated iron outer walls.
“My hope is to be able to live in peace and run my business freely from anywhere in Kenya without facing hurdles,” he said. “I want to live like any ordinary Kenyan."