Saturday, 22 December 2018

‘Early Morning Run in... Vienna'

The alumni and culture and history of this city are incredible. Where to start; Johann Strauss, Adolf Hitler, Mozart, Beethoven (“applaud my friends, the comedy is over”), Franz Ferdinand (“look at the view from this bridge”), Arnold Schwarzenegger (“the best activities for your health are pumping and humping”), Schubert, Ultravox (“OOOhhhhh Vienna”), Haydn, Sigmund Freud (“sometimes a cigar is just a cigar”), Marie Antoinette (“let them eat sausage rolls”), and many others who’ve help shape the world.

We are in Vienna in December, on the banks of the Danube. A 2-day conference. First impression, what a beautiful city. 

As I’m stretching, and reflecting back over a typical boozy conference dinner at the Schönbrunn Palace last evening, I admit to feeling a little groggy. Let’s return to that meal a little later...

0645 hrs. One degree C. C for chilly. Let’s have a quick waltz around this Viennese delight.

Vienna was via Bamako in a roundabout sort of way. 

Bamako. 

I’m overseeing a fire drill during a hotel security audit. The hotel is reluctant to cause any panic. Understandable, given the events in this hotel 3 years ago.

Hang on, we have to hold off. Looks like a VIP has turned up in a 4 vehicle convoy at the hotel entrance. He has a strange haircut, like a knotted platted orange rope along the centre of his black shaven head. 

Someone (maybe his agent) is busy organising the Malian paparazzi. The fellow with the comical hair sits proudly on a hastily produced white garden plastic chair. The camouflage vehicle on which he poses, with a mounted machine gun, is commonly called a ‘technical’ in Africa.

The armed soldiers, wearing full-face black balaclavas, pose either side of the celebrity, making gestures with fingers and arms, the sort of thing modern youth do, most of the time for no apparent reason. 

Come on; a white plastic chair in the back of a camouflaged technical, soldiers with AK47s making hip-hop moves, local paps taking photos, a celebrity with an orange rope on his head...

I mean, they look ridiculous. Fancy wearing balaclavas in this heat?

The fire drill is stalled as people gather in the reception area. Some preempting the exercise, some wondering about the fellow with the strange orange barnet. My mind goes back to an episode of Fawlty Towers.

The red lights flash. The piercing alarm sounds. A hotel worker parades around the lobby like a peacock with fanned feathers carrying a loudhailer telling everyone; “this a drill, please do not evacuate, don’t panic.”

I want to tell the peacock there are only 2 things which make West Africans panic. Number one, and the most important is ‘LOW BATTERY’. Number two, either bullets or tear gas flying around.

Mr. VIP walks through the crowd. He looks athletic. A smart tailored blue jacket, a red and white polka dot pocket handkerchief, top button fastened, narrow red trousers, brown suede loafers with no socks. If I had to be critical, the pants seem 3 inches too short, the fashion with the late 20s/early 30s set in London these days, I believe? Oh, and the designer facial growth.

The fire crowd and the VIP posse mingle easily. No drama. There’s no tear gas. VIP comes past me and politely says, with a cheery smile, “Bonjour, sava?”

I’ve been trying to guess the identity of Mr. VIP for the past 10 minutes. My first thought was Jeremy Clarkson, but the accent is all wrong.

I discover he’s a Premiership footballer. He plays for Crystal Palace and previously Liverpool. I nod and mumble a restrained, “Bonjour, Bienvenue.”

The fire drill ends well, everyone shuffles back to their rooms. Mamadou Sakoh (thanks Google) moves to the lobby to give an interview. A surreal event in most places, here just another day in paradise; well, Bamako. Sh*t, a vibration, a gentle throbbing in my trousers. What? I need to charge my phone!

Vienna.


Here’s the base. The Ritz Carlton. Very agreeable digs. Let’s jog towards the museum quarter.

I feel sluggish this morning, but the scenery is uplifting.








































Over the road a Christmas market in a rather grand setting.


It’s an easy jog this morning to show you the sights. 35 mins gone. The last leg, I want us to finish at the river. Then we’ll walk back and have breakfast together. The famous ‘Not so Blue Danube’, well according to Strauss when he wrote the famous waltz in 1866.


We have about a 1 km to walk back to the hotel as a warm down. Let me tell you about last night at Schönbrunn Palace. It started great, a guided tour and a champagne reception afterwards. I stand next to the guide picking up titbits to share with you. 

The tour lasts an hour. I’m on message, even asking questions. The Habsburg’s who ruled Austria for centuries until 1914. The room of a 1,000 candles.








































Vienna was heavily bombed in the latter part of the war. 26% of all buildings in Vienna were destroyed (thanks guide). 206 bombs were dropped in this area in one night. One scored a direct hit. The end ceiling was repaired post-war. The target was the Nazi SS barracks at the rear of the Palace (I was listening). Napoleon stories, Marie Antoinette tales. A great deal happened in this grand summer palace.

Post-tour, plenty of champagne quaffed at the upstairs reception, courtesy of a sponsor. Anyway, the preamble. Dinner is in a restaurant within the Palace grounds, featuring an all Austrian menu.

I’m sat at a lively table. The conversation and the wine flow smoothly. The restaurant has a theatrical feel to it.

Oh oh, the two heavy large red velvet curtains slowly open, behind which is a well-lit stage. This is a theatre dinner show. The props scream Danny La Rue/camp/Euro style.


Here’s the double act. A hammy comedian/piano player and a Marlene Dietrich type singer. Brits are generally non-plussed by this stuff, our European brothers lap it up. It’s camp, cheesy but strangely enjoyable. She’s running through those German oompah numbers with minimal audience participation. He’s telling some old jokes between numbers. Somehow it works.

She’s now knocking out, credit where credit is due she has a good set of pipes, an Edif Piaf number. I’m on an energetic table next to the stage, we’re engaged and enjoying ourselves. We’re singing the choruses, waving our arms. The sort of thing you do at Euro’tainment’.

I mean, how can you not; Non, rien de rein, non, je ne regrette rien...

Audience members on stage for the finale? A couple of suckers to be grabbed methinks. Edif is taken with our tables enthusiastic support… and close proximity to the stage. Before I can say, “je regrette everything”, she’s focused on moi. Merde, look awkward and dodge it, or laugh and pretend you love it? There’s about 150 of us at the dinner. She has the forearms of a docker and is locked on. Her white fluffy boa is around my neck. Option 1, or option 2? I should have seen this coming and given it a wider swerve than I give the Big Issue seller on Penrith High Street. 

When in Vienna... a red Christmas hat firmly in place and holding a brass bell for percussion. The other fellow kitted out the same. A German version of Jingle Bells, complete with kitsch dance steps follows.


I must admit, it all came a little too easily. The final picture (from the video) of the 5th and last post of 2018.

It only leaves me to say to you all; have a wonderful Christmas and a healthy and prosperous New Year. See you in 2019.

In closing, I have a favour to ask. If you’ve enjoyed the blog, please post a reply, and/or spread the word on your own social media. Thank you.

P.S. The last word goes to 'The Third Man'. Harry Lime: "Don't be so gloomy... After all, it's not that awful. Remember what the fellow said... in Italy for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder, bloodshed. They produced Michaelangelo, da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love - five hundred years of democracy and peace, and what did they produce? The cuckoo clock. So long Holly."

A photo of the Riesenrad Giant Ferris wheel in Vienna (since 1897) was part of the plan...


Thursday, 25 October 2018

'Early Morning Run in... Rwanda'

Where did we leave things after Lagos? I remember... the old French spa day. A splash of water on the face, a dab of roll-on and a cigarette.

Libreville, departures hall. I look up at the outsized framed photo of the fellow looking down at me. President Ali Bongo of Gabon. I’m a secret admirer of the ‘Africa Big Man’.

0630 hrs. Typical, a long queue at the single ASKY Airlines check-in desk. I’m flying ‘Arthur Askey Airlines’. 

Oh, oh... here we go. A powerful whiff of cologne at my six? Maybe 50 yards. Is it, could well be... I don’t want to turn, but I can’t resist...

This ‘Africa Big Man’ is tall, a big unit. A beast. He wears a brown leather fedora. A cream suit. A dark waistcoat. More bling than a Greek shipping magnate. A watch the size of a small tortoise. Open-necked shirt. Pointy crocodile skin shoes by the looks. A smart matching briefcase. Very snappy. Someone wheeling his designer bag to check. Someone else carrying his passport. The third member of his posse wears a yellow hi-viz vest acting as a lead scout brushing people aside.

The queue is folk, like me, who’ve spent 2 hours less in bed to observe this spectacle. ‘The Big Man’ has a languid gait, he moves without eye contact. I’m impressed. Shame? Are you kidding?

My luck is in, I bag an aisle with an empty seat next to me, or as I like to call it, a poor man’s first class.

After a change in Nairobi, we are in... Kigali, Rwanda.





She smiles warmly, “Visa on arrival, Sir.”
“Yes, please.”
“How long will you stay in Rwanda?”
I reply, “A maximum of 7 days.”
“What is the purpose of your trip?” 
“Business... I’m a risk management consultant.”
“A risk management consultant?”
“Yes.” (Security pays. The hours are agreeable, you meet a lot of interesting people, you travel a lot).
“Can you confirm your date of birth?”
“Sure, 14 December.”
She smiles, pauses, “The year?”
I pause, “Every year…”
She laughs. “Thank you. You are welcome in Rwanda. $20 please?”

(You’ve got to be kidding me, $20. I want to pay $200, and be sent away to fill forms, and grow a beard while sitting on a white plastic garden chair). 

“Sir, are you OK?”
“Er, sorry... I’m fine... er, yes... $20... thank you.”
“You are most welcome Sir, please enjoy your time in Rwanda”.

Stunned. This isn’t TIA. I pull myself together. The electronic gate opens. We (you & me) are in Rwanda. Smaller than Switzerland. The smallest state in E. Africa. The most densely populated country on the continent.






0530 hrs. Early O clock. Rise and shine. First light in 30 mins. We (you & me) are running around Kigali this morning. We are in ‘The Land of a Thousand Hills’. I hope everyone’s feeling fit, we’ll be bounding up a few of them. Oh, and we are 5,000ft above sea level.

The hotel base for this jaunt is unique. Hôtel des Mille Collines. Opened in 1973 it later became ‘famous’ after the movie ‘Hotel Rwanda’ in 2004. This is the actual ‘Hotel Rwanda’. 



Kigali doesn’t have street names so we will stick with directions. Roads and roundabouts in this district are prefaced ‘KN’ (Kigali Nyarugenge). We are heading straight uphill on KN-6. By the time we get back, you’ll be saying, not another KN hill. We head south...




The roads are unusually deserted on this last Saturday morning in June 2018. Today is Umuganda Day. Everything is closed as citizens street clean as part of their civic duty. It seems to work, this is the cleanest African country I’ve visited. Oh, and plastic bags are banned by law for the past 10 years.




A quick pause (and to recover after the first hill) to capture Gorilla Roundabout. Rwanda is famous for its primates, tourists come in their tens of thousands to go on safaris up-country. Enough of this monkey business. Let’s push on in the worlds 9th safest country. So much to see...







This country has come a long way since the abyss of 1994 and the genocide. Remember, around one million people were slaughtered in less than 100 days. The reason? They were Tutsi, or they refused to participate in the horror.

The turnaround in 20+ years later is remarkable. I’ve witnessed several post-conflict zones in Africa. A devastating war can take 2 generations on average to reestablish a working country, about 60 years. Meaning a stable political system; with a tax system, healthcare, education, infrastructure, housing, and agriculture.

The most significant change after the genocide is a ‘no winner takes all’ system, here no political party can have more than 51% of cabinet positions, regardless of legislative strength post-election. Women are in charge. Girl power... around two-thirds of parliament is women. 




Let’s continue South into the heart of the city. Are we all good for 40 minutes this morning? You have to think, as you see this what a remarkable job the President has done. President Paul Kagame.

He has critics, he’s been in power 18 years. You know, the western human rights critics who sympathise with activists, who always know best and have all the answers. Perhaps Kagame is an 'old school African hardman', perhaps he is a benevolent 'dictator', maybe what's needed, given where this country was in 1994. Whatever, it seems to work. I didn’t hear any dissent from the people who really do know best and have all the answers; yep hairdressers and taxi drivers. I’ve taken taxis and risked a wet shave and a trim.

Let's turn and start heading back to Hotel Rwanda. Breakfast is calling, accompanied by some exquisite coffee. 

Passing 30 mins into the run I reflect on how there’s a nice calm about the place. There’s seemingly no edge; it’s passive, normal, safe, sustainable, pleasant, clean, conservative and law abiding. In fact, so much so, I would even rent a small self-drive car and walk around late at night in a tuxedo, with a top hat, wearing a watch carrying a man-bag (kidding, the top hat is a bit over the top). If Rwanda were in the Far East, it would be Singapore. Could it all become passe?

After absorbing the modern wonders of Kigali, the vistas, the thought-provoking genocide museum, the Dian Fossey bit, spectacular lakes, Hotel Rwanda, sampling some of the best coffee in the world, marvelling at the Internet connectivity. Passe? No, not possible.

But... after a few days, I do start to miss some aspects of the ‘other’ Africa. The threat or edginess of being car-jacked in broad daylight in Jo’Burg, being caught up in Nairobi, being in the middle of a street protest, come riot, in Conakry, the dysfunction & comedy of W. Africa, the energy & buzz of Lagos, the mystery of Mali, or the dangers of the broader Sahel. Places, where renting a self-drive car or strutting around in a tux with your valuables wouldn’t cross your mind.

Mixed emotions on Rwanda. A little like your mother-in-law driving over a cliff in your brand new sports car. Hang on, I've read Rwanda switched away from Francophone to Anglophone, from the French language to English and joined the Commonwealth in 2009. Adieu to the French. Rwanda gets my vote...

Ah, there's the hotel. I've enjoyed taking you round Kigali. Grab a shower, see you on the terrace for brekkie...




Rwanda has captured my imagination. Decide for yourself. Tourism is rapidly growing as the worlds significant media outlets can't stop writing about Rwanda. I recommend a visit, you won't be disappointed. 

They say the two happiest days in a man's life, is the day he buys a boat and the day he sells it. Seeing Rwanda might well be number three.

Thank you for reading this post. I have a favour to ask; if you have enjoyed it, please add a comment below, or better still spread the word via your social media.




Wednesday, 25 July 2018

Early Morning Run in... Lagos’

Murtala Muhammed International Airport, back in the day, was a rendezvous with mayhem. Every city has a sign. ‘Welcome to Las Vegas.’ ‘Welcome to Calgary’. ‘Welcome to Basingstoke’.

Where is the sign? The one that merely declared, ‘This is Lagos’. On my first sighting in 2004, I gulped like many before me. Never was one more aptly written. Damn. There’s a new one now, ‘Welcome to Lagos’.

I plop my passport on the counter open at the visa page. The Immigration Officer smiles (seriously), “Welcome to Lagos.” I’m crestfallen. I want old Lagos back... my reunion with madness.

Let’s return to those bad old, good old days? Strap in, the following events take place in real time. Welcome to ‘16’ [hours].
It’s 2005. We (you and me) are somehow magically transported back to Choba. We are in the boonies of southern Nigeria. I begin any assignment with one question. What’s the worst thing that can happen?

Walhalla everywhere. The worst thing that can happen in the Niger Delta? Ponder no longer, it’s happening.

Gunshot wound. The injured man is rushed to the hospital.

Attacks on remote facilities, on off-shore oil rigs and kidnapping of my fellow oyibos. The Niger Delta is becoming difficult, again.

The primary client camp is a sordid den of iniquity. The 30+ years veteran ex-pat, ‘Texas Ted’, tells me the bank is safe, there are nine armed police guarding it. The camp supposedly has 86 armed MOPOL. I count 40 on a good day. I have two pressing concerns. The bank in the middle of the camp and a seedy bush bar.

TT thinks the camps bush bar is essential for morale. “Couldn’t the night fighters be booked out by a certain time?” Furthermore, he says, please focus on physical security. “Higher fences, more wire, more cameras and a canine or two. Africans don’t like dogs.”


I’ve always believed cultural awareness is ninety per cent of the job. Put it this way; some of these fellows from the deep south didn’t necessarily share the same belief.

The wounded man fights valiantly for life.

I disagree politely with TT, physically the camp is okay. I suggest spending the money on local communities to help create a more secure environment. I inherit a local team. My favourite is ‘Colombo’, the lead investigator. He has a winning smile and warm personality. He’s taken with his new nickname.

I’m preparing the ground for a long-term South African security manager. The security situation is deteriorating. A remote client site has been hit by MEND. The camp moves to lockdown. Workers are frequently drilled. Eventually, the bush bar is closed; no-one coming in, no-one leaving. All armed escorts to Port Harcourt are suspended.

Things temporarily ease. I leave to Port Harcourt for a flight to Lagos. I shake hands a final time with my replacement and the local team. I’m not sorry to leave this quagmire & TT behind. After landing in Lagos, it’s the Eko Hotel on VI; I telephone Choba.

My replacement is unbelievably measured, he tells me MEND had made a surprise visit. He says they came up from the swamps on three inflatables. A well-armed 25+ desperados. A shootout happens at the jetty. One MOPOL killed, one wounded. The remaining, and outgunned MOPOL had disappeared. The drills had worked, most ex-pats made the lockdown area. The less fortunate did the next best thing and dived under their desks.

One of the local staff caught a stray bullet.

MEND’s target? The bank. They’d spent 45 minutes on-site and made a substantial unauthorised withdrawal. I miss the shit show by 2 hours.

I grab my new Nokia (this is the future) and call a friend in Lagos, staring over the lagoon reflecting on the past month in Choba. There’s a group of security folk meeting this evening, a chance to meet a few of the guys. We meet at Pat’s Bar. Bar number one. Pat’s is a well-known expat bar. There’s about a dozen of us. A few beers, we head to bar number two. Bar number two is mixed. There’s about eight of us. The big hand is moving quickly towards the pumpkin hour.

My old Drill Sergeant used to say; nothing good ever happens after midnight, get yourself to bed. I knew this; quit after bar two, forget bar number three. Bar number three after midnight? Get yourself to bed.

There’s four of us left standing. The bar is called, 'YNOTS' (Tony's place spelt backwards). Should have been called, ‘Y’. Bar number three is entirely ethnic, save for a few crusty old tattooed white sea dogs (this is the future). YNOTS is in a remote area of Lagos, slap in the middle of a vast industrial car park. A lively atmosphere. My new shipmates seem to have healthy relationships with the massive bouncers. They handle the platoons of night fighters with humour and dignity.

It’s the famous Ashes series of 2005. I’m into my repertoire, which includes an impression of Ricky Ponting. My Ozzie accent is much better after a few beers. “Maaaaate, you gotta be kidding me maaaaaate, those cheating limey bar stewards, maaaaaaaate.”

0200 hrs. Shipmate number one heads out. Going into full Oz mode now; arriving in Australia, I’m asked at immigration if I have any criminal convictions. Haha... didn’t know you still needed one. Oh, oh... from nowhere, the mood changes... a bouncer runs over and beckons us to come quick. “Your friend has been attacked in the car park.” What...

Our shipmate is on the ground with his hands to his face screaming he can’t see. Someone brings a white plastic garden chair, we lift him. He’s yelling he can’t see from one eye. His face and hands are covered in green slime. We ask for bottles of water.

Car headlights provide the only light. I remember smoke rising from the food vans. Amid this chaos 4 oyibos; one of whom has suffered an acid attack. Same old story. When the excrement starts to fly, it starts to fly. My mind is scrambled. The attack earlier in Choba. Now, this...

We guide our vehicle through the eerie shadows and growing crowd to evacuate our unfortunate shipmate. We mount up. I glance out of the back window at the upturned white plastic garden chair, and strewn plastic water bottles everywhere. We clear the car park and head at speed to the ISOS clinic. A French duty doctor meets us.

We help until about 0530 hrs. First light back at the Eko Hotel, I’m exhausted. Could all of this really have happened in one day? This is Nigeria. As the old sign once declared, ‘This is Lagos’. Of course, it could...

Epilogue. We’re back to July 2018. I’m in Rwanda writing this, but I’m still thinking of Lagos having visited recently.

Lagos, a bad dream? Possibly. I even dreamt France won the World Cup.



I wake up in the ‘Land of a Thousand Hills’. A quick French spa day; meaning a splash of water on the face, a dab of roll-on and a fag (well, if I smoked). No, Lagos happened as described.

The wounded man was ‘Colombo’, he died of his wounds 3 days later. He left a young family.

An ex-Royal Marine was the acid victim. I received an email the Christmas after the event. He’d lost an ear, the tip of his nose and suffered burns to his upper chest, lower jaw, and the back of his hands. His sight was saved. At the time of the email he’d undergone several skin graft operations, more were planned.

Do I ever visit bar number three? Not so much these days. But, as Kingsley Amis once put it: ‘No pleasure is worth giving up for the sake of two more years in a geriatric home at Weston-super-Mare.’

My old Drill Sergeant was right about one thing, though. Nothing good rarely happens after midnight. Get yourself to bed. Another example below, to lighten up this post a little...

A few weeks ago, after a rare third bar excursion, my wife asked the next morning what time I’d arrived home, I told her “MIDNIGHT” … she seemed okay. Then she said, “We need a new cuckoo clock.” I asked why, she said, “Well, last night our clock cuckooed three times, then said, oh shit, cuckooed 4 more times, cleared its throat, cuckooed another three times, giggled, cuckooed twice more, and then tripped over the coffee table and farted...

Thank you for reading this post. I have a favour to ask; if you have enjoyed it, please add a comment below, or better still spread the word via your social media.


Postscript: The next post is written. Be my guest and running partner for, ‘Early Morning Run in... Rwanda’. Coming soon. The most amazing country in Africa I’ve visited. I stayed at the famous ‘Hotel Rwanda’...


Thursday, 17 May 2018

‘Early Morning Run in... Congo’

A thump of a big black fist, from the biggest hand I’ve ever seen, sends dainty teacups and accessories flying. Tea spills from the spout of a beautiful teapot over the silver tray, over the starched white napkins... the silver sugar tongs settle astride the silver tea strainer.

We are in the heart of Africa for this run. Africa’s Africa.

Forget about Africa ‘light’; the safaris in Kenya and Botswana, the wine tours and beaches of the Cape, the winter sun of The Gambia, the edginess and energy of Africa’s New York that is Lagos, the rising Africa of a Kigali or an Accra or a Dakar or an Abidjan...



Sod that! Africa’s Africa. Congo, this is where it’s at...

First light. 0610 hrs, a sticky 23C. We (you and me) are running along the banks of the deepest river in the world, the second longest in Africa. The immense River Congo.

We are in Congo Brazzaville. On the banks of the river on the other side is Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The two closest capital cities on Earth (forget Rome and the Vatican City).


























I’m up for this run this morning. We are heading southwest along a newly concreted corniche.



























I’ve read about this place. The highest recommendation on Tripe Advisor. Mami Wata. The ‘mermaid’ is reputedly Brazza's best restaurant. Dinner here tonight, you are all welcome. Bring insect repellent.

We’re heading to one of the most prominent landmarks in ‘Brazza’. A steady 2 km to open with this morning. I’m more fixated on the other side of the river. You see, KInshasa was where it all started for me; my first gig, my first client. It was 1999. I’ll tell you about it over dinner this evening.

Here we are. ‘The Chinese Bridge’. Put another way, and it’s official name, Le Pont du 15 août 1960. This bridge connects central Brazzaville to the Presidential Palace. At 5,500 dib-dobs to the dollar, this boondoggle would probably have cost several billion dib-dobs. Looks good though?







































Brazza has oil and a small population, around 5m. As we head back towards downtown along the corniche, a few things about the country. About the size of Italy with 1/10 of the population.

It is bordered by Cameroon and the Central African Republic to the north, DRC to the east, Angola to the south and Gabon to the west. The Atlantic coastline is in the southwest.

Apart from petroleum extraction? Other industry includes lumber, cement, brewing, sugar, soap and palm oil.



It’s quiet. I know today is a public holiday (Thurs 10-May), but it’s quiet everywhere. A few joggers and walkers and the odd green taxi. Brazzaville is Sleepsville.

Let’s see what’s happening downtown?

I must say, it’s clean for an African capital. Plenty of street cleaners in their blue coveralls active around the streets. Plenty of police officers stood around as well.

Standby...

... here come those drums, 30 mins into my running playlist... oh, that bass guitar, Bobby Kimball on vocals. From 1982. Let’s get up on our toes and sing loud and proud on each chorus... it’s addictive, come on...

Ready... take it, Bobby...

Hurry boy, she's waiting there for you
It's gonna take a lot to drag me away from you
There's nothing that a hundred men or more could ever do
I bless the rains down in Africa
I bless the rains down in Africa (we’re on backing - I bless the rain)
I bless the rains down in Africa
(I bless the rain)
I bless the rains down in Africa
I bless the rains down in Africa
(Ah, gonna take the time)
Gonna take some time to do the things we never had

Brilliant...







































Oh, there's a statue of the Big Banana (Denis).

Here are my digs, which, by the way, are excellent. The Radisson Blu Brazza. Come on, let’s get brekkie. Oh, just under 40 mins for the run this morning. Around 7.5 km.





1930 hrs. Back to Mami’s. Dinner looking over into Kinshasa. Several chilled Congolese beers, lashings of mozzie juice, and of course you for company.





These local beers are damn good. Easy tiger, they are making you emotional, all melancholic about the passing of time (get a grip)...

Flashback...

Sept 1999. A vertically challenged idiot of a client. My first ever client. ‘Get Shorty’ wears Cuban heels. He’s American/Israeli.

A South African, his former business partner, has threatened to kill Shorty if he steps foot in Kinshasa again. This little pearl is revealed after the midpoint of our jaunt through Jo’Burg, Lusaka, Kitwe, Harare, Katanga Province, and Kinshasa. Shorty tells me the South African has form.

A private Lear jet and two continually moaning white South African pilots (the difference between a South African pilot and a jet engine? The engine eventually stops whining.)

A security advisor on his first private gig (moi) with no luggage courtesy of BA; an advisor who’s wearing some strange local ensembles, some more suited to Hawaii.

President Laurence Kabila of the DRC.

Ministers from the DRC - er, none.

President Kabila’s Cuban trained bodyguard with slitty eyes who looks like he could kill with either end of an AK47, and enjoy it.

The DRC Presidential Palace.

Tea served with an elegant bone china tea set. Helped by a waiter wearing a crisp white tunic with brass buttons.

A business proposal presented that isn’t music to President Kabila’s ears.

Get Shorty is wholly owned by Kabila, a massive man with an aura to match. He’s shaken down to his Cuban straps.

A further attempt to resurrect the deal by the idiot. Not music to anyone’s ears, including mine.

Two big black fists this time. Table survives another fierce strike, now awash with tea. Kabila upset. Kabila insulted. Kabila raises voice. Slitty’s eyes narrow even further. Client panics, can’t talk... (makes a pleasant change). No one plays mum, there will be no tea. Not today. Pity, the security advisor has his design on those silver tongs as a small keepsake. When in Congo...

Attempt to leave the country. Try to calm and reassure the Short One. Realise I’m on Kabila’s side. Realise I’m not doing this line of work anymore. Realise the South African former partner has a point.

Blocked from boarding the executive jet by Slitty eyes (he enjoys his work, I admire that) and about a dozen well-armed soldiers.

Uh-oh, Slitty does speak English. Explains we ‘should’ return to the hotel. The President is concerned for our safety (join the club) as our flight plan is over troubled Angola. The short one loses the plot entirely.

I push my arm out waist high to restrain him, it brushes Shorty on the forehead. I thank the President, His Excellency, through Slitty, for his safety concerns, and of course, we will return to the InterCon (while we have a choice). We will continue on our merry way when the President says it’s safe.

Back at the hotel. Shorty is calmer. He instructs me (his confidence sadly returning), to inform the American, the British, and the Israeli Embassies we have been kidnapped (a bit strong Short One, I’d prefer to use the term detained).

Security Advisor rings no-one.

All we need now is for the crazed South African assassin to make a cameo appearance.

Clandestine meetings take place well into the night. We are permitted to leave a couple of days later.

A parched deserted runway in Harare. We shake hands. The Short One is flying to meet his wife for a holiday. We craft our parting words. “Short One, this could be the start of a beautiful friendship.”

Sorry, went all Bogie there. In reality, “Thanks for everything. Mark, you handled yourself well in Congo. Why don’t you work for me full time?”

I bend down, “I’m not sure; what would it look like (I’d rather sit through a Jim Davidson show, or see Celine Dion in concert three nights running), I could consider it?”

“Well, I’m based mostly in New York, whatever they pay you in the army I’ll pay you 50% on top.”

Nodding, “OK (you little tight arse. The army is a vocation and nothing to do with dib-dobs), perhaps send me something to look at and we can talk...”

Memories. Woah, is that the time? Let’s walk back to the Raddy together. Occasionally, I think back to Congo of 1999. Sometimes it only takes a trigger. Strangely, this can be when I’m reaching for the sugar lumps...

When in Congo...

Thank you for reading. Before you go, I have a favour to ask. If you’ve enjoyed this post, please pass on (Facebook etc.) and do leave a comment. Merci.

Tuesday, 27 February 2018

'Early Morning Run in... Gothenburg'

I’m sitting in a hotel bar. It's early evening in Sweden. I’m approached by someone wearing a leather flat cap and a knee length black leather coat and a red scarf. He looks just like Borat’s sidekick, the guy who drove the post van around the US. He’s squat and solidly built. He’s from Tbilisi, and his name is George. I’m glad of the company.

We’re in Gothenburg.



Me and my new shipmate, George from Georgia, are sharing a few yarns and clinking glasses a little too quickly. A tall blonde Swedish fellow, Erik, joins us. “Hei, what do you think of Swedish beer,” he asks enthusiastically. Swedish beer, well it’s similar to the bottom of a boat, both close to water. “Love it, just behind Belgium when it comes to beer”, I respond.

I’ve seen this movie before, and not referring to Borat. The script where one gets plastered with someone dressed in black leather who has an association with the Former Soviet Union. George must be an alcoholic; he’s now ordering vodka chasers with his beer. My definition of an alcoholic? Someone who drinks more than me.

We clink glasses... again. George proposes a toast, “To the Mothers of our children.” I glance at my watch; it’s nearly half past six. I’ve promised myself I’ll be in bed by 2100 hrs. I’m attending a conference tomorrow, and I’ll be doing the ‘Early Morning Run in... Gothenburg’ for this blog. George explains toasting in Georgia is a ritual. There’s toast number one to ten which are the formalities. He explains we can then go off-piste with toasting. At this rate, I’ll be half-piste before we get halfway through the formalities.

George stands, “To our families.”

I’m on a two-city European tour for work. Here and then Geneva. My instinct tells me Gothenburg is the better bet for the blog. It’s more real and down to earth. Switzerland is well, Switzerland. Mind you; the flag is a big plus.

I ask Erik about Gothenburg and a suitable route for the run tomorrow morning, somewhere that takes in the sights and places of interests. Erik kindly provides some information. I turn to thank him. Erik has done the old French exit.

George stands, “To our countries”. This fellow is a maniac. “Yep, our countries.”

I tell George a tale about visiting Tbilisi back in the late 90’s. I was in the army, and it wasn’t long after Georgia’s independence from Russia. Toasting with George is bringing it all back. “Mark, what did you think of our people?” I remember one person in every five had a beard, more if you included the women. “I tell you what I remember George; one word, spirit. An indomitable spirit.”

George stands, “To spirit.” Ouch, “Spirit.”

“George, tell me a story from Georgia?” George pauses, adjusts his leather cap.

“Well, there's a story about a man in my village near Tbilisi. This old man spent 40 years working in our village school. Do they call him ‘Giorgi the teacher’? Oh no. He fixes everyone’s bicycles when they break down. Do they call him ‘Giorgi the bicycle guy’? No. When the bridge was washed away in the floods, he rebuilt it with his own hands. Do they call him ‘Giorgi the bridge-builder’? Uh-uh. But he gets caught diddling a goat just ONE time…”

George stands, “To goats everywhere.” Blimey O’Reilly, “Billy Goats.”

Hey George, “Listen, I need to get to bed, it’s nearly quarter to eight. I’m, er, running in the morning. I can’t let my readers down.”

George stands, “Mark, a toast before you go, my friend.”

I can’t think straight; I go to the old standby as used in Tbilisi nearly 20 years ago and still going strong. Yep.

Mark stands, “George, to our wives and girlfriends... and... (pause)... may they never meet.” George laughs, “May they never meet.”

Fast forward to 0600 hrs. Reveille is playing on my smartphone. Not for long it isn’t.

Fast forward to 0730 hrs. Reveille is playing.

Fast forward to 0815 hrs. My head... why, never again. Right, get up and take breakfast before the conference, or grab another quick 30. Breakfast is overrated...

OK, so where’s the flipping run Ringo? We've read through this twaddle to learn about Gothenburg? OK, I feel bad, come with me, it’s late afternoon. I’ll walk around the city, grab some fresh air and take a couple of snaps for you...





Where to next? This year has started in a crazy way for travel. I’m busier than a Baghdad brickie.

Mark stands, “Long may it continue!”

So, where next? I’m now completing an extended 6-week road trip in East Africa, but to places, I’ve covered before. In fact, I’m on my way home from the last leg, in Jo’Burg, where I stayed with my old friend, ‘Lifeline’. This post is completed today on the Kenya Scareways flight. No retakes.

For long-term readers, ‘Lifeline’ is a 4-time guest runner (Harare, Bulawayo, Vic Falls & Jo’Burg) back in the summer of 2014 in the early days of the blog. The best road trip of my life. Great memories (photo after the Vic Falls half marathon).



Come on, for the love of Friday, where to next!?

Mark stands, clears throat, the big one, the one I’ve always wanted, raise your glasses, “LAGOS.” That’s right, Nigeria.

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