AFRICA NEWS
In Senegal, old clothes get a new life for profit
By Mariama DARAME
Dakar (AFP) July 1, 2019

The market around Colobane Square in central Dakar has been a hive of activity since dawn as hundreds of buyers and sellers haggle over the latest imports from Europe.

Piles of designer stone-washed jeans and jackets and shirts vie with skirts and T-shirts -- all of them pre-worn.

Second-hand clothing, "feugue-diaye" in the Wolof language, is a vibrant business in Senegal.

Each year, thousands of tonnes of garments tossed out by wealthier Europeans find a new home in West Africa, helping people to look good and businesses to make money.

"If you want cheap brand-name clothes, this is the place to come to," says Mamadou Sarr, a 23-year-old wholesaler, pointing to the bales of jeans on his stall.

"All these have come from England."

Binta, a 29-year-old habituee, says the bargains can be extraordinary.

"You can buy dresses, jeans, T-shirts for a low price, designer gear," she says.

She contends that second-hand clothes sent from Europe are "harder-wearing" than new garments exported to Senegal from China.

Retailers rummaging through the garments always have an eye out for a particular jewel: a football (soccer) jersey, which is much prized by young Senegalese.

Sarr and his older brother buy the clothing consignments for between 35,000 and 70,000 CFA francs ($60-121,53-106 euros), which they then sell off in 45-kilogramme (99-pound) batches to retailers.

After paying intermediaries, customs duties and transport costs, the brothers can clear as much as 450,000 CFA francs ($780, 675 euros) in a good month -- roughly eight times the minimum salary in Senegal.

- Golden threads -

Senegal is just part of a global industry in recycled clothes, whose biggest exporter is the United States, with 756,000 tonnes.

Many wholesalers in Senegal get their clothes from Le Relais, a French cooperative that collects used clothing in France, the former colonial power.

Le Relais sends Dakar around 500 tonnes of pre-sorted clothing per year and has a warehouse in Diamniadio, about 30 kilometres (18 miles) from Dakar, where its 51 employees sort another 200-250 tonnes.

The garments are sifted according to category -- dresses, shirts, etc. -- then sorted again, graded according to their quality and state of wear.

"There are some goods which aren't worth anything, but the main thing which we have been trying to do is create jobs," says Virginie Vyvermans, Le Relais' deputy chief in Senegal.

Profits from sale of the clothes go into local development projects and into paying the salaries of the employees, most of whom are women. All are on permanent contracts -- not temporary or daily work.

One of them, Marie-Helene Marome, spoke highly of her job: "I've been able to enrol my children in a private school and buy some land for a home," she says.

One of Le Relais' customers, Aliou Diallo, 34, explained how he decided to quit his job as a grocer after the warehouse opened up.

"I saw a chance," says Diallo. He has seven shops and warehouses around Senegal that employ 30 people.

According to Sarr, retailers often double the markup on clothing they buy from wholesalers.

"A trader who buys a T-shirt from me for 300 CFA francs can sell it in his shop up the road for 500, 700, 800," he says.

- A downside, too -

If wholesalers, retailers and customers are delighted with the second-hand business, specialists say there is also a disadvantage.

As developing countries elsewhere have come to experience, the dumping of cheap or free clothing can cripple the local textile industry.

In the 1980s, "customs duties (in Senegal) were slashed and import quotas were abolished, and this opened the door to massive imports of second-hand clothes," says Ahmadou Aly Mbaye, a professor of economics at Cheikh Anta Diop University in Dakar.

Textile companies "disappeared from Senegal and the neighbouring region," he notes.

Any attempt to revive the country's garment industry would encounter "the huge obstacle" posed by cheap imports, he says.

And if the workers at Le Relais enjoy job security and other conditions, such rights are rare in the clothing recycling business, adds Mbaye.

Many people have job insecurity, suffer more accidents and are lower paid than counterparts in other areas of the economy, he says.


Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food

AFRICA NEWS
Sudan army ruler seeks to resume talks with protest leaders
Khartoum (AFP) June 19, 2019
Sudan's army ruler Wednesday called on protest leaders to resume talks on the transfer of power without any conditions, as tension between the two sides persists after the bloody dispersal of demonstrators. Dozens of protesters were killed and hundreds wounded on June 3 when a weeks-long protest camp was violently dispersed by gunmen in military fatigues, who stormed the site shooting and beating demonstrators outside the army headquarters in Khartoum. The raid came after the collapse of earlier ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

AFRICA NEWS
Japan to test infrared sensors for early warning satellites

Turkey unafraid of US sanctions over S-400 deal: minister

Lockheed Martin awarded $76.7M for AEGIS development, test sites

Erdogan to use ties with Trump to defuse S-400 tensions

AFRICA NEWS
Lockheed nets $561.8M for tactical missiles for Bahrain, Poland, Romania

Turkey's Erdogan says S-400s delivery for early July

Iran unveils homegrown surface-to-air missile defense system

US gives Turkey to July 31 to backtrack on Russian missile deal

AFRICA NEWS
New energy-efficient algorithm keeps UAV swarms helping longer

Low-cost Valkyrie unmanned aircraft completes second test flight

BAE Systems to install vehicle control systems on Boeing's MQ-25 refueling drones

Airbus and the Hauts-de-France region team up for UAV deliveries

AFRICA NEWS
AEHF-5 encapsulated and prepared for launch

Corps begins fielding mobile satellite communication system

AFRL demonstrates world's first daytime free-space quantum communication enabled by adaptive optics

Harris to build new satellite connection system prototype for USAF

AFRICA NEWS
GenDyn gets $16.2M contract for Abrams M1A1 tank tech support

U.S. Army changes recruitment approach with new advertising agency

Trump blames drug use for transgender army ban

Oshkosh, Broshuis land $13.3M Army contract for new semitrailers

AFRICA NEWS
US Senate votes to block Saudi arms sales, UK suspends licenses

New Pentagon chief an ex-soldier who moved to the defense industry

Shanahan's Pentagon rise upended by painful family past

Turkey says US ultimatum on Russia missile deal 'inappropriate'

AFRICA NEWS
Vatican urges China not to intimidate underground Catholics

Chinese jets buzz Canadian navy; Xi agrees to Japan state visit; Chinese military to dock in HK

Eighteen-nation BALTOPS exercise wraps up in Germany

Philippines agree to joint China probe over boat sinking

AFRICA NEWS
Monitoring the lifecycle of tiny catalyst nanoparticles

Fast and selective optical heating for functional nanomagnetic metamaterials

2D gold quantum dots are atomically tunable with nanotubes

Harnessing microorganisms for smart microsystems