Source: Pulitzer Center
More than a thousand people were killed in a deadly landslide in Regent, a mountainous town in Sierra Leone, six miles from the capital, Freetown.
Musu Jabbie, a mother of five, lost her husband during last year’s catastrophe along with her sister, who left behind three children. Now with eight children to care for, Jabbie, 35, is doing remedial work at the same site that claimed the lives of her closest relatives.
“It’s not easy, but I am grateful,” Jabbie said.
The re-building project comes months after a torrential rainstorm filled the crevices along the vulnerable soil of Sugar Loaf Mountain causing the land to swell, according to Nicholas Gardner, a civil engineer with the United Nations Office of Project Services (UNOPS). The pressure from that swelling caused trees and boulders to break away from the mountainside, creating a tsunami of water and mud which flowed down the mountain to the valley and into the sea. The displacement of more than 3,000 residents pales only to the many who lost their lives.
More than a year later, the road to recovery is still in the making. Some initiatives on the ground are addressing the deforestation issue along with the area’s economic disparity—the two factors many believe caused the landslide.
Along this section of the mountainside, trees were removed to accommodate rapid development. According to Gardner, mass tree clearing destabilizes the ground extracting roots which help to bind the soil.
As a builder, Jabbie’s husband Musa Jabbie was on site acting as caretaker for one of the properties.
Now, Jabbie, is one of 15 women laborers working mountainside to rebuild it. A UNOPS initiative—looking to equalize the gender gap in the workforce—called for hiring an equal number of men and women to help restore the shattered mountainside.
UNOPS enlisted the help of a local employment agency to hire workers in the area. Jam Holding began their search in neighborhoods most impacted by the landslide. The company’s president, Ibrahim F. Nyomeh, asked elders within the community to submit names of people interested in post-landslide remediation, a process that followed a series of one-on-one interviews.
Jabbie of Gbangagila was among 150 women to apply.
During the implementation phase of the project the women maintained roles as site laborers and site wardens. As laborers, Jabbie and her coworkers were tasked to dig holes andremove and cart materials they found buried inside the mountain. Automobile parts, lumber, and cement blocks were some of their finds. Prying the iron rods and mesh embedded in the collapsed houses—at times with hacksaws—was, for all the workers, the most daunting.
When body parts were discovered, the Ministry of Health was contacted to avoid contamination.