Friday, October 31, 2008

In the middle of this dusty town there are road signs pointing to El Geneina (in Sudan, Darfur), to Faya on the road to Libya, to N'djamena in the west where the country accesses the Atlantic through Canmeroun and Nigeria, and finally a road to the south, to Bangui and the Congos. ..

I am now in Abeché in Eastern Chad, having flown here yesterday on the WFP plane with the head of education in UNHCR. Indeed she is the only permanent staff member for education in UNHCR. The rest are either consultants like me, or secondees mainly from NRC. S. with whom I am working here is one of these unsung heroes working away very hard covering the remotest of places.

Abeché is a near-desert town which is the Lokichoggio of Chad. A town full of UN and NGOs, little to do with Chad really. A brief visit downtown could have been Hargeisa, Djibouti, Fasher, Mandera etc. The traders speak Arabic for the most part and consider themselves part of the wider Arab world, the women trade only at petty levels, the same colourful blankets, cheap radios, sweet biscuits are found everywhere. Prices, in the Central Africa version of the CFA franc (same value as that of Abidjan) are high.

I have the distinct impression, that like in Nzerekoré, in Guinea, also NGO Centrale in its time, it will also lapse back into its own life with its infrastructure totally unchanged by years of NGO and UN activity or presence as there is no investment at all in infrastructure ('we are humanitarians, the government does development'), apart from the airport.

Water is short, electricity is generators, fuel is brought in especially. I am also reminded of Juba in the eighties.

There is a huge turnover of staff and a six weekly R and R (which I also get). Middle level UN staff are mainly west African and Congolese though I have already seen several Kenyans. I am back in UN procedures again with a long list of people to see and sign my check-list (but no desk to sit at yet). Radio call (but no radio yet).

In a very small room in the UNHCR guest house, but it is self contained at least. We can eat at a 'restaurant' over the road but I am taking my (Quaker) breakfast at least, chez moi.

You only get 15 kg on the flight (though Ethiopian had given me 40kg if I wanted it), so there is a juggling of luggage and (as always) what they tell you in N'djamena (you are bound to find X, you must carry Y) turns out to be not very correct, often because . I searched N'djamena for Quaker, or any oats (avoine) and bought four tins, only to find them in the first shop I came across in Abeché.

What else to say? Camps of French troops EFT (elements francais au Tchad), EUFOR French, Polish and other troops (Force Europeans), MINURCAT (equivalent of MONUC), helicopters, etc etc.

And, yes, the lorries of WFP and others which come here from … Tripoli … through Faya. There is a direct road to the Mediterranean, open and functioning. Full lorries in, illegal migrants out, I guess.

Oh, everyone tells us that we are expecting another attack from one of the many acronyms, JEM etc, since the rains are over. The rebels have as many acronyms as UN.

And we about to support once again a distance education programme by radio which is completely unnecessary since cassettes were invented some time ago and with cassettes you can listen whenever you want. Education by radio has tremendous staying power despite zero evidence that it works in these circumstances.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

http://tourettesboy.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=114&Itemid=5

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Ice, madras, telegrams

Martin Ryan a good friend of mine wrote in his interesting book about William Francis Butler ( Lilliput Press) that the British army mess in Madras in the early 1860s got its ice from Boston. 

 

I don’t know that ice would last that long (I suppose it got a cold boost round Cape Horn if they went that way).

 

It reminded me of the crazy guy who used to attend Friends of the Earth meetings in Edinburgh recommending that glaciers be towed to the tropics as a source of cold fresh water.  So was he really crazy, then? Or just visionary. Yes, I know they are usually the same thing!   

 

As someone recently wrote in a book I was reading about the Ottoman empire, globalisation is nothing new.

 

By the way, did you ever read a slim volume called the Victorian Internet?  He points out that the telegram was in some ways better than the internet / e-mail since anyone could receive or send a telegram at any time using the telegraph boys (such a delight of Oscar Wilde, apparently, as they often had a little sideline, income-generating, activity between messages).   

 

In Sherlock Holmes we see him exchanging several telegrams in a morning with the police, railways stations, country houses etc. No word of the sideline, but he was not married.

 

Probably the telegram it was more the equivalent of the sms.

 

He points out that when the telephone was invented it had very slow uptake because no one knew why you would want to talk to someone, and it would be impolite to call without having sent a message first. So in the first years it was the butler who answered and he wrote the message down.  (Obviously if you had a telephone, you had a butler).

 

==

This morning, CNN totally devoted to hurricane Ike – no other news at all, (in fact no news since Ike is hardly doing any damage at all) whereas I wanted a weekend of Sarah Palin, my current heroine.  

 

‘Refreshing’ is hackneyed, but she’s great! 

 

After all, a black man who speaks Indonesian*, a white veteran who presumably speaks Vietnamese*, a total nonentity in Biden,  all fade into the monochrome  background in the presence of an oil-drilling, moose-hunting, messy family life, skirting-on-the-edges of-the law gun-toting lady who comes from Alaska.  

 

And that poor boy who is being forced to wear a suit and marry the daughter. It was probably literally a shotgun marriage/engagement.  Mother-in-law actually shoots.

 

More power to her elbow, but if they win and JMcC drops dead we would be in for many interesting times. Palin v Putin. It kind of rhymes.   

 

Hope all is well with you!

 

Barry  

 

* Always remember the Manchurian candidate.

 

Saturday, August 30, 2008

FW: [Reality Check] Loath

 

 

From: Barry [mailto:bsesnan@gmail.com]
Sent: 11 July 2008 06:39
To: bsesnan@gmail.com
Subject: [Reality Check] Loath

 

From a report:

NGO officials are loath to put a figure on lives potentially saved or

additional people helped if the money spent on transportation went to

food instead, but one analyst said it could roughly double the number

of beneficiaries based on the assumption that 70-80 million people now

receive US food aid annually.

This must be a record, as NGOs are wont to slap a figure usually with a lot of zeroes onto anything that moves (and doesn't!).  But we know we are still in familiar territory with 'roughly double' and then the estimated figure in millions which means that they were not really loath after all.



--
Posted By Barry to Reality Check on 7/11/2008 06:38:00 AM

No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com
Version: 8.0.169 / Virus Database: 270.6.13/1642 - Release Date: 29/08/2008 18:12

Friday, August 15, 2008

Interesting long term position

From a job advert (Government of Pakistan) in last weeks Economist

1)      CRITERIA: Highly qualified, possibly postgraduate, with a minimum of 20 years experience

2)      TENURE: The selected candidate will be employed for an initial term of 4 years and shall be eligible for reappointment, upon satisfactory performance up to a maximum of 65 years.

Assuming you graduate at 20, that makes 105.

Well, Shangrila, the land of eternal youth,  is in Pakistan, isnt it?

Barry

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

A 'glance at India' (Just in case you think you have too much to do).

Just in case you think your Terms of Reference are a bit arduous (this was before internet, or even Kenya or Sudan Airways) :

From Stanley’s ‘autobiography’ put together by his wife. At this point, he was the probably most renowned roving  journalist of his time

‘A telegram called him to Paris .. and there on October 16, 1869, he received a commission of startling proportions. He was to search for Livingstone in earnest  -- not for an interview, but to discover and if necessary extricate him, wherever he might be in the heart of Africa:  But this was only to be the climax of a series of preliminary expeditions   Briefly [!! He was given 12 months]   these consisted of:

- A report of the opening of the Suez Canal [on 17 November 1869]

- Some observations of Upper Egypt and Baker’s expedition [up the Nile to Uganda via Sudan]

- The underground explorations of Jerusalem

- Syrian politics

- Turkish politics at Stamboul

- Archaeological explorations in the Crimea

- Politics and progress in the Caucasus

- Projects of Russia in that Region

- Trans-Caspian affairs

- Persian politics, geography and present conditions

- a glance at India [!!]

- and, finally a search for Livingstone in Equatorial Africa [he succeeded in Ujiji, now Tanzania, on the shores of Lake Tanganyika,  1871, though like Emin Pasha later, Livingstone turned out not to consider himself lost, but that was not going to prevent Stanley having a good story! ].

Stanley tells us about the ‘Ujiji banquet’ when they dined together:

‘… my tent-boys advanced to spread a crimson table cloth and arrange the dishes and smoking platters heaped up profusely with hot dampers, white rice, maize porridge, kid kabobs, fricasseed chicken and stewed goat meat. There were also a number of things giving variety to the meal, such as honey from Ukawendi, forest-plums and wild-fruit jam, besides sweet milk and clabber. And then a silver tea-pot full of ‘best tea’ and beautiful china cups and saucers to drink it from [after all Livingstone and Stanley were both British in Origin though Stanley was an American at this time]. Before we could commence this already magnificent breakfast the servants of [ three Arab local notables, probably slave traders in origin] brought three great trays loaded with cakes, curries, hashes and stews and three separate hillocks of white rice.’


 

And no, I have no idea what hot dampers or clabber are.

 

 

Monday, June 30, 2008

Re: A different take ...

This is surely not exclusive to west Africa? In southern Africa this is very common - usually not about morals but rather about bartering scarce resources, simply about economic necessity and, arguably, a chance to equalise exploitation and redress the power balance a little.

Anne

----- Original Message ----
From: Barry Sesnan <bsesnan@yahoo.com>
To: John Ashworth <ashworth.john@gmail.com>
Cc: education@ivorycoast.nrc.no; Blog <bsesnan.barrysbook@blogger.com>
Sent: Sunday, June 29, 2008 10:21:43 PM
Subject: A different take ...

A different take ...

From:  Veronika Fuest, Changing roles and opportunities for women in Liberia, in African Affairs 107/427

Many women have had to resort to prostitution to survive and / or support their families.  However the question may be asked if all these women are to be viewed as just passive victims, or also as agents with the scope to make choices. While I do not want to deny the extensive exploitation by outright or subtle enforcement of prostitution by kin, it should be mentioned that 'loving business', women's profitable utilisation of multiple partnerships with men, has for decades constituted a regular if hidden feature in the income and networking strategies of many women from all quarters of Liberian society.

While some staff of UN organisations, peace-keeping forces and NGOs as well as politicians and businessmen, have been accused of taking advantage of the girls' economic situation, it may be equally true that many girls are taking advantage of the presence of thousands of unattached foreign men with deep pockets rather than – or in addition to – sweating in the rice fields or in the markets, or depending on kin for support.


Sunday, June 29, 2008

A different take ...

From:  Veronika Fuest, Changing roles and opportunities for women in Liberia, in African Affairs 107/427

Many women have had to resort to prostitution to survive and / or support their families.  However the question may be asked if all these women are to be viewed as just passive victims, or also as agents with the scope to make choices. While I do not want to deny the extensive exploitation by outright or subtle enforcement of prostitution by kin, it should be mentioned that 'loving business', women's profitable utilisation of multiple partnerships with men, has for decades constituted a regular if hidden feature in the income and networking strategies of many women from all quarters of Liberian society.

While some staff of UN organisations, peace-keeping forces and NGOs as well as politicians and businessmen, have been accused of taking advantage of the girls' economic situation, it may be equally true that many girls are taking advantage of the presence of thousands of unattached foreign men with deep pockets rather than – or in addition to – sweating in the rice fields or in the markets, or depending on kin for support.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

A pinch of salt

This will be familiar to all of us – The highlighting is mine!  Re point no 7 … there was always a similar problem in Goma and Gulu in trying to get someone important to attend a seminar, workshop or opening ceremony.  In the early years of this decade the district education officer in Gulu could have spent all day every day in NGO and UN workshops; in Goma an appropriate market in significant officials developed.  

 

At least they were honest (unlike in the attached where actually there are no definite facts at all, but it didn't prevent the writer from writing at length!)

 

I think no 9 means that the whole village would turn up and insist on having its say, like in Swiss democracy.

 

Interestingly the visa question in no. 1 should not have applied. There have never been any restrictions in S Sudan, only in the north. (However they may mean some restriction imposed by the US itself).

 

And just to round off, I toss in a quote I found in a report somewhere:

 

'Despite being the district with the greatest number of NGOs and interventions in the last year, the situation has continued to get worse. '

 

Barry

 

Targeting in Complex Emergencies:

South Sudan Country Case Study

Daniel Maxwell and John Burns

May 2008

Feinstein International Center 􀁺 MAY 2008

 

Limitations to the study

Several difficulties were encountered with the field research, which serve to limit the extent to which the findings of this case study can be presented as verified by adequate triangulation, or can be broadly generalized. These are outlined below. But it should be emphasized that the findings of the study should be accepted as tentative findings, because of the constraints encountered.

 

1. The trip to Sudan had to be postponed because of visa restrictions on US citizens.

Though rescheduled within a few weeks, this caused significant upheaval in that it meant three of the senior WFP staff who had intended to be part of the study team could not, in the end, participate.

 

2. The team member from Rome who is responsible for the fifth study objective (the cost of targeting) was unable to join the team. He handed responsibility for that part of the study

over to a senior VAM officer in Southern Sudan, who at the last minute was also not able to join the team. The team collected some of the information requested, but this objective is

clearly not well integrated into the report.

 

3. One important member of the team drawn from WFP Southern Sudan staff had to leave the team suddenly when his father passed away. This was of course unavoidable, but left

one of the research teams without a translator or local informant, and resulted in the loss of several days of valuable team time.

 

4. Translation was provided by WFP, but this relied on staff who were not trained translators, and were often not neutral interpreters. In some circumstances, this caused

significant problems and some data had was dropped. It was not possible to hire translators.

 

5. The selection of sites for the team to visit was constrained by security and logistical considerations. One of the sites selected had little capacity to support (or even engage with)

an external research team, and in some ways, offered little in terms of contrast to situations

already researched. One site had to be cancelled after the research began because of

deteriorating security, but was replaced with other sites where useful information was

gathered.. Sites selected by WFP included two Dinka areas, and one are in Equatoria, so the

sample was not representative of all of Southern Sudan. Evidence from other areas was

drawn upon to the extent possible.

 

6. It often took quite some amount of discussion with community groups before they became convinced that the visit of the research team had nothing to do with an assessment and would not result in changes to food aid allocations. This no doubt colored the focus group discussions—particularly the first part of them. Data were treated accordingly.

 

7. Juba is overloaded with external consultants, experts, and advisors, all of whom are trying to see the same limited set of senior policy makers within the GOSS. This restricted access to important informants, and meant a lot of time was devoted to trying to set up appointments or waiting for appointments.

 

8. None of the old PDM reports mentioned were available from WFP. Some respondents indicated they were in archives in Rumbek or Lokichoggio. Those drawn on for the study

were from the personal files of current and former staff, and are not a "representative"

sample, although there is no known systematic bias to these reports either. The main point about reports from an earlier era is their very existence, compared to a paucity of such

reports currently.

 

9. As noted above, it was often impossible to restrict group size or participation to the originally intended respondents

 

Friday, June 13, 2008

Re: SD Sudan Airways, RIP

Actually I took Air Ivoire when I travelled from Freetown to Bamako. I had to spend a night in Accra anyway - at the airport hotel. I went to check in next morning but was told that the flight was already full and they had closed the gate! So I had an extra night in Accra at their expense. Luckily it didn't make me late for the conference. However, I was anxious on the way back. Bamako is not the sort of place where one would like to get stuck.

And there must be easier ways of getting from Freetown to Bamako than via Accra and Abidjan!


--- On Fri, 6/13/08, Paul Mitchell <paulkakuma@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:

> From: Paul Mitchell <paulkakuma@yahoo.co.uk>
> Subject: Re: SD Sudan Airways, RIP
> To: "Barry Sesnan" <bsesnan@yahoo.com>, "Timothy Brown" <brownunhcr@yahoo.com>, yebu10884@yahoo.com
> Cc: "Blog" <bsesnan.barrysbook@blogger.com>, "Robin Shawyer" <robin@windle.org.uk>, "David Masua" <masuadavid@yahoo.com>
> Date: Friday, June 13, 2008, 12:22 PM
> I knew you wouldn't
> However my flights with KQ have always been good.  We can
> all have our off days (inc KQ and SD).
> How are Abidjan Air?
>
> Paul
>  
> Paul Mitchell, Regional English Language Advisor,
> Windle Trust International, Southern Sudan
>  
> paulkakuma@yahoo.co.uk
> +254 720 449 277 (East Africa)
> +256 477 118 109 (Gemtel Sudan)
>  
> Windle Trust  International  "Education: Development
> Through People"
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Barry Sesnan <bsesnan@yahoo.com>
> To: Paul Mitchell <paulkakuma@yahoo.co.uk>; Timothy
> Brown <brownunhcr@yahoo.com>; yebu10884@yahoo.com
> Cc: Blog <bsesnan.barrysbook@blogger.com>; Robin
> Shawyer <robin@windle.org.uk>; David Masua
> <masuadavid@yahoo.com>
> Sent: Friday, 13 June, 2008 11:52:05 AM
> Subject: RE: SD Sudan Airways, RIP
>
>
> I will refrain from listing the 3 out of 6 Kenya airways
> (return) journeys I have done in the last year which have
> successively aborted takeoff, had a door which failed to
> close and ran into the mud.  With the result of having two
> extra days in Nairobi (nice) being sent via Dubai to get to
> Abidjan (horrible 40 hours without hotel or anything) and a
> night in Douala (OK as a one off).
>  
> And the plane which took off from Douala in the middle of
> raging thunderstorm, having been told not to take off and
> was found in tiny fragments deeply embedded in the mangrove
> swamp.  Nor the fact that no one knew that that plane had
> crashed for six hours because they seemingly don't track
> planes. Only when it was more than usually late into
> Nairobi did anyone notice.
>  
> No, I will not mention them.
>  
> Barry.
>  
> From:Paul Mitchell [mailto:paulkakuma@yahoo.co.uk]
> Sent: 12 June 2008 16:40
> To: Barry Sesnan; Timothy Brown; yebu10884@yahoo.com
> Cc: Blog; Robin Shawyer; David Masua
> Subject: Re: SD Sudan Airways, RIP
>  
> Dear Barry
>  
> I knew you couldn't resist.  However according to the
> BBC story as broadcast, and as confirmed by the link below,
> it ddin't crash, but had landed safely and the engine
> fire began whilst the plane was on the ground.  As well as
> the link, also look at the related link on Air disasters
> Timeline which makes interesting reading.
>  
> I have flown several of the Sudan Airways planes from
> Juba-Nairobi and vv, always remembering what you said, and
> many are no worse than most, the A310 being a really good
> example of this model. Some Marsland planes creak rather
> more!
>  
> Yesterday I discussed this with class of lecturers/TAs et
> al I am teaching at Juba University, and they agreed it was
> serious, but if you look at the graveyard of vehicles
> smashed on Juba's roads over the past 12 months I know
> which I feel safer in- and that is a Sudan Airways plane. 
> However I would prefer KQ to fly Juba-Nbi than any of the
> planes on the route; East African Safari's planes which
> are advertised as the best are 43 years old, according to
> infor on a website I was looking at a coupl eof months ago!
> However normally I fly UNHAS, mainly Dash 8 and Caravans
> within SS and to Loki.(although I haven't had R&R
> since the beginning of March)
>  
>  
> * Dozens die in Sudan jet inferno *
> At least 28 people die and more than 50 are missing after a
> plane bursts into flames after landing in Sudan, officials
> say.
> Full story:
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/1/hi/world/africa/7447243.stm
>
>  
> Paul
>  
> Paul Mitchell, Regional English Language Advisor,
> Windle Trust International, Southern Sudan
>  
> paulkakuma@yahoo.co.uk
> +254 720 449 277 (East Africa)
> +256 477 118 109 (Gemtel Sudan)
>  
> Windle Trust  International  "Education: Development
> Through People"
>  
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Barry Sesnan <bsesnan@yahoo.com>
> To: Timothy Brown <brownunhcr@yahoo.com>;
> yebu10884@yahoo.com
> Cc: Paul Mitchell <paulkakuma@yahoo.co.uk>; Blog
> <bsesnan.barrysbook@blogger.com>; Robin Shawyer
> <robin@windle.org.uk>; David Masua
> <masuadavid@yahoo.com>
> Sent: Thursday, 12 June, 2008 2:44:08 AM
> Subject: SD Sudan Airways, RIP
> SD I used to joke is Sudden Death.  Once again a Sudan
> Airways plane crashes, and as usual it is not far from the
> airport.
> The number of crashes, (Port Sudan, one embedded in a
> building at the end of El Obeid runway, one in the Nile
> which the pilot seems to have thought was the runway (they
> do run in the same direction), plus the one the SPLA
> rocketed at Malakal) must make it have most dismal record
> of any airline.  A few years ago they had no planes left.
> They don't even change the logo.
> Barry
>  
>  
>
> ________________________________
>
> Sent from Yahoo! Mail.
> A Smarter Email.
>
>
>
> __________________________________________________________
> Sent from Yahoo! Mail.
> A Smarter Email http://uk.docs.yahoo.com/nowyoucan.html

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Musing over mango


Setting the scene: Sunday, a very wet early morning in my flat in Abidjan eating a huge fleshy mango cold from the fridge, before putting a shirt on (because of the mango)!

Watching on web the extraordinarily generous Hilary Clinton speech ceding victory and endorsing Obama.

I am back in Abidjan after a week in Liberia (first time I had been there – only Angola now among major conflict countries in Africa that I haven’t visited).

Then a week in our field office in western Cote d’Ivoire trying to save or put a decent end to a hugely expensive youth training project which has got out of hand. The project takes 300 supposedly displaced and illiterate youths in three ex-conflict towns and trains them on a skill half the day and gives them functional literacy and life skills the rest of the time.

Fine, quite classical and we use local workshops/salons for the apprentice part. However, someone went wild on the idea of how much help the local workshop/salon should receive for hosting and training our little dears. We are causing massive distortions in the market. ‘Our’ hairdresser has everything; the one we don’t help next door has nothing … the room for corruption even at the level of choosing which salon to work with was huge.

We are going to pour 50 or so partly trained tailors into a small town market, already saturated, in a few months, same with hairdressers, yet neither the number of bodies to be clothed, heads to be coiffed, nor the disposable income has changed.

It is, I am sad to say, still possible for this to happen these, despite all the agonising and soul-searching and the old accountability to donors and the new accountability to beneficiaries.

If we had divided all that money among the kids they would have been rich by now.


Liberia last week

In Liberia last week I thought it was lucky for some that we are all sinners, otherwise why are there so many churches? In Monrovia there are thousands of American offshoot churches with gleaming buildings and ‘God wants you to be rich’ slogans in the direst poverty. Sorry, that is the Nigerian churches. The American churches work on ‘God wants ME (your pastor) to be rich’.

The visit (which put Liberia into my list, category D) was great, very interesting and made even better by having a good friend working there already so I got a lot of the background. I also got a lot from the work point of view, especially since I had been able to take most of my assistant management team with me.

I have to remark on Liberian Engli, though. It is so difficu to foll. They swall the en of ever wor.

Three women in Gulu

I went to Gulu in early May to help with a little training for one of the Echo Bravo projects. Despite the fact it was unplanned, I had quite a good two days, proving once again that for everyone a quick visit is often better than a long one. I managed to visit the school Echo Bravo runs at Tiiti.

I also met three interesting women, two of whom I had met before and one I hadn't.

First was Apollonia, still running Christ the King Girls' Teachers' College and we reminisced over the very first (pre JRS) trainings for refugee teachers which EPSR held around 1991. Apollonia was the one who made all the hung-over teachers run miles at 6 am to wake them up! She'd been dreadfully sick with breast cancer but appears to have survived the cancer and the surgery, no mean feat in Uganda.

She told us stories similar to many that are now coming out about the relationship between the LRA and the civilian population. The young LRA fighters showed themselves far more often than anyone let on, it seems, and kept in touch with 'normal' society. There were stories that would be funny if they were not so tragic, about mistaken identity and youth telling each other off for trying to assassinate her, in a case of mistaken identity. 'That's not C, that's Apollonia'. Just a remark away from being shot.

Of course it was always obvious that there were some back and forth movements, but to reveal them would have exposed people to government wrath. WFP food distributions in camps were spirited away to the bush the following morning with the LRA men who had come in into the camp in the night. As a result pregnancy rates also remained fairly normal.

Then there was Sister Rosemary who represents me in my absence as local signatory and head of Echo Bravo. She runs a whole variety of activities for displaced people and orphaned girls and her compound/convent/school is one of those delightfully chaotic-seeming places where huge number of things are going on. A safe haven for many in the troubles over the last twenty years.

Met also a strange New Age therapist who said she was a midwife, who was going to change all Uganda's birthing practices overnight. She was staying with the sisters, all of whom who she had given New Age massages the evening before. I was bemused at first, this tattooed young midwife with a jewel in her forehead going on about vibrations and eating chromium to lose weight and having a sauna in a pyramid made of gold leaf (I think that's what she said). In the restaurant she helpfully told us about an ancient oriental method of cleaning your ears out, while we had our lunch.

I was happy to hear that after years of a typical Northern Ugandan’s hard life and difficulty, Apollonia had been able travel a little, for example to Norway for NRC Scouts and Guides. Sister Rosemary had just been taken to New York by CNN (first class all the way) to receive a 'hero's award from Christianne Amanpour, for her work with abducted children, and LRA-raped girls who are now mothers, a group of great concern to Echo Bravo also.

Ian Smith, a great friend and fellow consultant, with long connections with Sudan, Uganda and the rest of Africa, had died a couple of weeks before about a year after he had his heart attack and stroke. Strangely in this connected world, there were very many people he had worked with who didn't know he had died (even though it was a pretty big announcement in the New Vision). But then, I reflected, if I died in Cote d'Ivoire, it could be quite a long time before the message filtered to people in other countries.

SD Sudan Airways, RIP

SD I used to joke is Sudden Death.  Once again a Sudan Airways plane crashes, and as usual it is not far from the airport.

The number of crashes, (Port Sudan, one embedded in a building at the end of El Obeid runway, one in the Nile which the pilot seems to have thought was the runway (they do run in the same direction), plus the one the SPLA rocketed at Malakal) must make it have most dismal record of any airline.  A few years ago they had no planes left.

They dont even change the logo.

Barry

 

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Tuesday 6th May.

Today I am listening to the BBC trying to make the best of not knowing a lot about what is going on in the tempest-hit part of Burma.

Like the insistent reporting of Zimbabwe from Johannesburg (‘because; as you know BBC is not allowed into Zimbabwe’) and even worse during and after the Kenya elections where the reporter was actually (we were led to believe) in Nairobi, but appeared to know nothing at all about what everyone else was frantically texting around the country, this is yet another example of the smug self-satisfaction and inverted pride at having been banned  from Burma triumphing over the need to get real news.

Just as from Nairobi BBC floundered while we all in the region received detailed texts and blogs from friends about what was going on and Al Jazeera had a live reporter reporting directly from the clash sites, the BBC seems obsessed (as so often) by body counts and the assumed incompetence of the authorities it doesn’t like.  Often when we do have something reasonable from a  reporter his or her words are cut off in mid-sentence (doesn’t anyone know we can tell from the intonation that there was more to be said. (Often followed by the injunction to read more on the website … in my car?  In bed?  In the shower? In the refugee camps and villages without electricity where I work and many live?

I have just listened, in one top of the hour bulletin to (shock, horror!) the figure for the dead being revised up from 10,000 to 15,000!  Doesn’t anyone realise that these round figures mean absolutely nothing?  That a lot of other things go on besides dying in a disaster?

Well, maybe: the reporter (in Bangkok) interviewed a remarkably lucid American tourist who said, yes, what I could see in Rangoon as I walked around  was quite bad but the people rallied around.  It took the reporter only three sentences to finally get out the question: did you see any dead bodies?  Well, no, actually, but I did see ordinary people coping with the mess.

Then there is the loss of the sense of time and date to conceal a lack of information. The tourist said he saw people reading newspapers which had a weather diagram showing a storm coming.  If this was before  then it showed that there was awareness of what might be coming (and then why didn’t ‘the world’ know about it?). 

If it was after, this means at least that newspapers were being produced.  He then made his way to the airport, but disappointingly didn’t see any bodies?   (I listen on steam radio, my TV isn’t working. maybe on TV there were maps,  but  on the radio the whole of Burma, then later South Burma was mushily merged into one – hence the BBC’s surprise that the referendum would go ahead in untouched parts of the country. 

It took all morning before I discovered it was an area of islands, bays and swamps that was affected.

Then the UNICEF man interviewed in New York said that UNICEF had five teams out … shortly after a snippet on whether the international community could get into the country. This discombobulated your correspondent …  it took him some time to realise that these were Burmese, not foreigners, in the teams.

Oh, and the famed ‘outside world’. I admired one expert you interviewed who had just said that China and India were helping out and the correspondent said something like, but what about  the outside world …  She sharply reminded us that India and China make up a third of the world.

As I write this on Tuesday afternoon, the waffle continues.  Worse, second hand and clearly biased opinion is being reported. A Burmese in Bangkok has had contact with his family in Rangoon (presumably by some means unavailable to the BBC) who conveniently remarked that the troops who had been everywhere when it was a matter of monks being beaten up, were nowhere to be seen.  It may well be true, but it is just a little too convenient that this was what was said. 

Meanwhile, all day we seem to have been hearing about girls learning golf in Nairobi.  Not just girls, sorry, but girls from Nairobi’s convenient slum (mispronounced Kibiiira or kaibeera all day though it is pronounced correctly in the recording), the one you can get to just a short drive from the studios.   Actually we have a clue to that, since the interview is being conducted at Nairobi race Course where only the elite ever go. So what is your correspondent actually doing there?

Oh and I forgot the important news also repeated all day that American scientists believe that tropical insects will fare badly with global warming.  (Unless they adapt).  Well, a lot of us welcome that news, since we spend a lot of time trying to eradicate the pests.  Still ‘whimsical science item, on a serious issue’ box duly ticked, I suppose, though I couldn’t actually detect that it was said tongue in cheek.

Still, it reminds me of a CNN weather correspondent as we suffered from a drought in East Africa, sorrowfully announcing that regrettably there would unfortunately be a lot of rain in our area,.  Or when CNN just after the Nairobi embassy bombing solemnly asking the only white person they could get hold of on the phone whether Nairobi had any hospitals, while we stood horror struck watching the usually reviled taxi boys shuttling the injured to the main hospitals! 

Keep it up!   Try collecting a few more phone numbers, cultivate the art of telling listeners on the radio what the geography of the place is like. After all, sometimes we know the place, or may have a loved one in the area.  Try using correspondents and interviewers who have a little knowledge and can assume that things might just be different from what you expect.

Learn a little UN and NGO speak so you can tell when they are waffling and above all stop the obsession with body counts and try to pronounce the words  Is there any good news in this disaster? Are there any real facts?   

Then you try: We now nothing for the moment and we will not speculate.

 Come on, it’s not too hard!

Barry Sesnan

Entebbe

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Modernising pidgin

Apparently a new way of saying Hes dead in pidgin English is:  De guy don delete!

Monday, March 31, 2008

to blog March

Well, another Easter. By rights we should expect great events this weekend as it has also been the weekend of the equinox, a full moon and the prophet’s birthday.  It is raining gently this morning, thus ruining several thousand planned days out to the beach (but maybe not, because the rip tide is very dangerous, going to the beach is more like ‘going to a restaurant on the beach’.   The best restaurants on the beach are east of here in one of the old capitals, Grand Bassam.

I am in Abidjan and may go out to visit one of the churches to hear the singing, as I used to do in Kampala. The Namirembe choir in Kampala has a beautiful Easter repertoire of western classical and Luganda religious songs which are becoming classics in themselves with their mixed musical style.

‘Simmanyi’ (‘I don’t know him’ sung by Petro/Peter the apostle) has amazing power when sung by a strong choir in the very English-looking cathedral on one of the hills overlooking the city, yet it has traditional roots in its call and response style.

In other countries there is dancing as well as singing in the Catholic churches, something which quite a few popes have struggled to cope with. It is said that when the church was having problems in Mobutu’s day with his call to African ‘authenticité’ there was a Mass created in Kinshasa with leopard skin hats, tasselled fly whisks and strong tom-tom drumming and dancing.  The white priests apparently were as enthusiastic as the Congolese and being Congo the whole congregation was soon dancing. 

After all, aren’t all they all, western and African branches of the Great Mumbo-Jumbo as the Victorian explorers and earlier (Like Mungo Park) described African practices? (It was only later that the term was used to mean incomprehensible speech, like Latin in the masses).

In the last few weeks I have moved around our small circuit of three offices ending up back here as caretaker over the holidays, my fate at my age, I suppose, while the rest of the staff, all younger, have their holidays.  I will get a few days away shortly and will probably finally get to Monrovia, and possibly Conakry. 

I went to look after one of the field offices for ten days, part of the way on the UN helicopter with the Russian interpreter who lived in London but can’t remember where, but speaks English, French, Russian, Spanish to us and reads (in one flight, …  I watched him ) Italian, German and Portuguese.  His job is ‘interpreter’, naturally.  In colonial days the French system had such a post and you could be liable to transfer wherever an interpreter was needed, and it is said that occasionally the bureaucracy forgot that an interpreter needs to know the actual language where he is and posted their only Khmer expert to Devil's island French Guyana or similar. 

With the head of office recently while I was ‘doing’ the Duekoué office,  I took a short, pretty expensive, but worthwhile drive into Guinea.  It was to the town of Nzérékoré (lots of accents in French speaking countries) which had its decade as UN/NGO city dealing with refugees from Liberia and, sometimes, Sierra Leone and Cote d’Ivoire.  

The town is still peppered with locally manned NGO offices now with not a lot to do, and after a decade of the most intense aid project presence, still has no working electricity supply and no air service accessible to the people, though it is as distant as you can get from Conakry the capital at the coast.

This happens a lot.  Agencies do almost nothing to boost the local infrastructure preferring each to have their own electricity supply, import their own fuel, set up their own mail and logistics services.     The most egregious case was in Juba in the early eighties. Juba was a sizeable town, a regional capital, less than 200km from Uganda, but there was no working petrol station and putting a letter (remember ‘letters’?) in at the Post Office would be the last you ever saw of your letter (or, more realistically, you could actually go and see your letter every day as it never left).

Meanwhile, I used a Nairobi post office box number and got my mail through Norwegian Church Aid on their twice monthly flight and we imported fuel in barrels, demanding  that it be tax free, for our own agency’s use only.   ( this nonsense still goes on, leaving local authorities with utterly no revenue to work with in NGO-infested towns)

Of course, one of the main results of this was massive theft from our hardly hidden barrels, usually by people working for our organisations. 

We wouldn’t pay to photocopy preferring to do it ‘free’ in the agency offices so no one set up a commercial enterprise.

Like Juba, Nzérékoré  and similar towns full of expatriates, agencies and vehicles, instantly atrophied to nothing when they all left. 

I seemed alone in believing that if we meant what we said as agencies we would help the commercial sector to provide fuel, simply by becoming their reliable customers; I almost slipped there into jargon to say ‘partners’! 

We had vehicles going up and down to the airport all day but no one ever offered to carry the mail bags (the Post Office like everywhere else in the government sector never received funds from Khartoum, and what little they did get went into paying staff arrears so there was a vicious circle in operation).  

This hasn’t changed a lot.  UNICEF, for one, has abandoned any pretence at developing local enterprise demanding that procurement be done through a centralised office in Copenhagen (who were unable in my experience to conceive of what a school-kit might mean, or what a school in Africa was like) with six months’ delivery time. 

[There are pitfalls though with any approach …  in Goma after the volcano, local procurement, when finally permitted under stringent tendering rules, was often through one canny trader who was the quickest at importing; the local economy was not actually benefiting much.  

On the other hand, in Goma once some committed NGOs got a school furniture scheme going using a constellation of local carpenters, the economy started humming again as money flowed. ]

Back to Guinea.  In West Africa people have always liked bush-meat, which is usually small animals like the giant cane-rat (‘agouti’, or ‘cutting grass’) or a large hedgehog/small porcupine, or small forest antelopes.  They are an important occasional source of animal protein and occupy the same dietary niche as chicken, goat or pork in other rural areas, i.e. an animal small enough to use most of it at one sitting.

Like everywhere, the trade gets out of hand –especially with urban demand -   and prices rise and then grassland is burned to drive them into the hunters’ reach. On the principle that farmed animals don’t risk becoming extinct (think of cows – no one is trying to save them from extinction, though they die regularly for us) the Japanese, at who knows what expense in terms of flights, consultants, experts etc have set up an experimental agouti farm like a battery chicken shed outside Nzérékoré.

We visited it on the Sunday but found that after five years the project had never come to term – there was a lot of research and the people running it knew a huge amount (and had themselves, as we saw on the fire when we arrived, consumed a lot of agouti) but no one had tested whether it was possible to develop the market. Even a basic and important question like ‘is farmed agouti as tasty as a wild one?’ did not appear to have been seriously addressed.  

For much of the short trip we were driving round the base of Mount Nimba which is the point at which all three countries meet. There are forest companies (seemingly Chinese) exploiting the timber and running the main hotel -- and some undefined other mineral activity going on with the result that what should be a park or reserve seems curiously out of bounds.

There is a legend of giant frogs on the mountain which have been known to eat people.  These frogs, some local curiosity, appear on the calendars and tourist publicity and are iconic in the region, but how they inflated to being giant and anthropophagous, I don’t know (though it is a convenient story for keeping people out).  

It reminded me of the old colonial story of the medical officer showing slides in the village on a large white sheet as part of a malaria campaign, being told that it was interesting, but ‘our mosquitoes are certainly not that size’. 

It was refreshing in Guinea that the few police checks seemed just to be there to normal law and order reasons and not to rip people off as they do all over Ivory Coast.

Back the next day in Duekoué a foreigner went off jogging at 5.30 pm into the most dangerous piece of bush in the whole of Cote d’Ivoire without telling anyone where he was going and then getting himself totally lost in the forest by nightfall with a failing battery on the very edge of mobile coverage.  He was just able to call me once to say he was lost. Luckily I was able to mobilise UN to go looking for him and we found him.  Then I was able to tell him that two people had been murdered - exactly where he was running - the night before.

What was interesting is that when we asked the local people about him they said: well there was this white man who ran through the village without greeting anyone …  we have no idea where he went.

Which reminds me of an earlier trip to the west. The Norwegian and Swedish ambassadors (both women) were our guests for a couple of days. The Norwegian ambassador is petite, élégante,  experienced and uncomfortably perceptive. She gave us a very hard time on everything from protocol to the programme, while smiling sweetly the whole time.  The Swedish ambo (resident in Stockholm) was going on and on about how they like ‘being informal and seeing what is really going on’ then lambasted us because they did not meet enough dignitaries and didn’t have a formal reception line at the dinners!

They got worked up when their schedule ran late (in village Africa!) and I got words because my assistant had set up three school visits instead of two. I insisted we should not disappoint the third school (if only because jealousies might flare up in a very sensitive area – I understood why my assistant had included all three) and told the ambassadors that it was a two-way street and their visit had value for the children and the parents as well as for them.  

I then got them into a primary 1+2 class (Classe CP Unique) class, warmed the little kids up a bit and then told the kids they could ask the ambassadors questions and one little gamin who had not idea what an ambassador was or what Norway is (but they sang a praise-song to Barry, which was sweet, but also not the image I want to project)  acted just like a teacher and asked them to name objects in the room!   

In the same class our teacher saw nothing wrong with emphasising points by striking the desks with the stick he was carrying thus frightening the children, the ambassadors, and worrying me seriously that it was probably on the children, not the desks, that the stick usually landed.

French is the only language in common here and little kids in the village are taught to read and write in French from the beginning (and in much of the country there is no other lingua franca).  Some reform of teaching in France meant that they teach both cursive and print simultaneously but to ‘avoid confusing the kids’ they don’t teach capital letters in the first year.  It is weird to me and has all the hallmarks of a ‘fashionable reform’ which probably works in a truly French-speaking country when you have 22.5 children (already speaking French) in the class and a hugely qualified teacher, but is unsuitable for large classes and inexperienced, unmotivated teachers (we give them just 60 dollars a month).  

I am used to the idea that all children can speak at least one lingua franca, usually Swahili, but maybe Juba Arabic or Nyanja. In Cote d’Ivoire I have seen classes of 30 primary one children with nine languages among them, and the teacher not knowing any one of the nine.   Yet there is also no training in Direct Method.          

==

The dollar goes down and gold goes up.  In Ituri they must be digging again – many boys in the last few years paid their school fees by panning for gold. It was not all done like in Blood Diamond with the cruelty and quasi-slavery … though it could be just as bad if you fell in the hands of a militia.

==

A thought: How come Kosovo gets to declare independence and Somaliland doesn’t?

Barry Sesnan


Monday, February 18, 2008

Ivory Coasts one and only military helicopter has just crashed. It was the only survivor when the French air force destroyed the rest in retaliation for the government forces accidentally killing 9 French soldiers.

At Abidjan airport, along with the presidential plane that still has a big red plastic tarpaulin taped over the gaping rocket hole in its side, we see the helicopter wrecks regularly as we march out (single file only!) to the UN flights we use to go to the west. If ever there was a memento mori it is this.

barrysbook.blogspot.com .. ebrealitycheck.blogspot.com
barrysesnan.site.voila.fr