Fearing the Tide in West Point, a Slum Already Swamped With Worry

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Author(s)
MacDougall, C.
Publication language
English
Pages
5pp
Date published
15 Mar 2016
Publisher
The New York Times
Type
Articles
Keywords
Shelter and housing, Urban
Countries
Liberia

West Point rose from the ocean in the 1940s, when Monrovia’s first shipping port was dredged and created. A group of fishermen moved to the sandy patch of land next to the heart of Monrovia, and the capital’s largest slum was born. As the years passed and migration and war pushed more Liberians into Monrovia, West Point expanded.

Now it is packed with local fishermen and migrants from upcountry; gangsters who steal car batteries, rob people and deal drugs; and market women selling piles of coal, chicken feet and potato greens.

The slum is home to an array of ethnicities, religions and languages. Along West Point’s single paved road, lined with food, tea stalls, tailors and video shops, men in Islamic skullcaps and women in chadors live side-by-side with tattooed men in tank tops and women in micro shorts.

In recent years, residents have faced bigger battles than negative perceptions. The tide that is claiming vast swaths of their coast is becoming hungrier, and the community is vanishing, despite efforts to reclaim its man-made boundaries with garbage, and buffers made of sandbags and corrugated zinc.

The question now is whether to improve infrastructure and facilities in West Point — or to move the residents elsewhere.