Donors make it harder for Africans to avoid deadly wood smoke
Making the cleanest the enemy of the clean
YVONNE KAYAYA has never seen a gas cooker. In a poorly ventilated room in her home in Kasai, Congo, she stews potato leaves over a charcoal stove no bigger than a small stool—as generations before her have done. “I sometimes cook with firewood. If I have money, I always buy charcoal,” she says, unaware that both fuels are clogging up her lungs.
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Fire escape”
Middle East & Africa May 8th 2021
- Somaliland, an unrecognised state, is winning friends abroad
- Donors make it harder for Africans to avoid deadly wood smoke
- Covid-19 has exposed Africa’s dependence on vaccines from abroad
- Houthi rebels look to take Marib, prolonging Yemen’s war
- Foreign workers in Qatar get some basic rights
- How Arab autocrats pick their opponents
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