Audio By Carbonatix
“I always pray for good things. I ask for God's blessing. When I enter the mosque daily, I ask God to protect me in this head porter job.
I ask God to let me meet good people who will pay me fair prices for my services so that I can also make some money, buy food to eat, and also be recognized among my peers as a human being worthy of respect”, says Valentina, sitting in front of the tin shack she lives in.
At about 6 PM in the evening, Mamuna comes back from the market. From this point, she, like many other girls doing Kayayie, would have to think of yet another hurdle.
Old Fadama, the slum in which they live, has no running water and no public toilet. The situation has left room for private bathhouses and toilets usually overcrowded with people who are ready to pay the exorbitant monies charged for use.
“When you enter the public bathhouse, it is often so unhygienic. U will find used pads with blood and sometimes pampers used for children all lying in the small untidy bathroom. When there is water, we pay one cedi to have a bath but when there's a shortage of water we pay ¢1.70 to have a bath,” she says.
Like Valentina, many of the girls dread the life they live in now and want to go back home.
“There is no work in our villages. Nothing to do in other to earn an income. The only time we have something little doing is the rainy season where we assist our parents to plant their fields.
"So how can young girls who have needs just get up and sit throughout without doing anything with economic value? That is why many girls continue to come” says Valentina.
This is the second of a five-part series by JoyNews shining a light on the life and struggles of Ghana’s 'Human Shopping Baskets', known locally as Kayayei who mainly come from the five regions of northern Ghana.
Latest Stories
-
Workers betrayed – Minority caucus blames Mahama administration for deepening hardship
37 seconds -
We need to restructure Ghana’s gold transactions – Dr Atuahene
6 minutes -
BoG’s GH₵15.6bn loss “necessary evil” for macroeconomic stability – Dr Richmond Atuahene
7 minutes -
New footage shows how Trump dinner gunman charged through security in four seconds
11 minutes -
Ministry of Health warns against fraudulent recruitment links ahead of nursing intake
13 minutes -
Nkwanta police arrest 2 with gun, over 11,000 rounds of ammunition concealed in truck
16 minutes -
“I’m so ready” – Black Sherif reacts to 9 TGMA 2026 nominations
29 minutes -
I want to contribute to the museums of inspirations – Black Sherif
31 minutes -
Black Sherif plans comeback to classroom after leaving UPSA
40 minutes -
Curfew lifted in Karaga as gov’t maintains ban on arms
40 minutes -
May Day : ICU urges gov’t to turn economic gains into real relief for workers
41 minutes -
Prompt engineering, the 24-Hour Economy, and Ghana’s AI future
42 minutes -
Engineers & Planners pays $2m into Black Stars’ 2026 World Cup fundraising drive
42 minutes -
Gov’t assures fair returns for cocoa farmers despite expected global price drop
44 minutes -
NAGRAT demands urgent teacher recruitment, funding reforms on May Day
45 minutes