Just In The Gambia

July 15, 2008

Saint Louis, Senegal

Filed under: Current — jitg @ 11:24 am

We had some pretty special rain on Monday afternoon. The skies got darker and darker from about half-past three. At the same time I discovered that neither of the vehicles that usually offer me a ride home was on site. Normally this would send me scurrying to the taxi park to find a minibus heading my way…but getting out of Banjul this way involves pushing and fighting for a place and climbing onto moving vehicles, and I did not fancy doing this in a downpour. So I asked around and found a ride; this car was not going exactly the way I needed, but it got me out of Banjul at least. The rain lashed against the windscreen as we queued out of the capital and across Denton Bridge. We turned across the rice fields outside Bakau, and found that the road was awash. There is no real drainage system, and surface water has to find its own way to lower ground; in this case it was coursing towards us, a brown muddy river over the width of the road. And then, perhaps inevitably, one of the cars in the queue ahead of us broke down. A large lorry managed to get past the obstacle, but for cars this was not really an option, as it meant driving into deeper water on the sand at the side of the road. So we waited amidst the rising water, and watched as the occupants of the imperilled car opened their doors, removed their shoes, gingerly stepped outside and began to push the car upstream to a dryer position.

Meanwhile our windows misted up, and the occupants of my car had an argument about which settings to use on the air blower to clear the windscreen. Many hands pressed all kinds of knobs; the hazard warning lights, the interior light, the rear window heater, the radio, even the handbrake. Now, being from a cold wet country, I am familiar with demisting car windows, and I could have given these colleagues a little assistance to solve their problem. But they did not ask, so I let them get on with it. It is like this at work sometimes, too. I am realizing that people need to acknowledge their need for help first, otherwise the help that is offered may be unwelcome, or misunderstood, or even perceived as a threat.

A little while ago I took a week off and travelled to Saint Louis, a city in the desert environment of northern Senegal. Follow this link to see pictures and read more about my trip to Saint Louis.

July 5, 2008

Green Shoots

Filed under: Current — jitg @ 5:00 pm

Rain has come again. Last year our rain arrived late, and the local harvest of rice and maize suffered. As a result the hungry season began early, and many families have had very little to put in their stomachs for quite a while. So despite the sweaty humidity and the churned up muddy roads, the rain is welcomed as a returning member of the family and people rejoice as the green shoots of crops begin to show. Most of my colleagues, even though they are office-based civil servants, also farm a piece of land back in their home village. This will please the President with his ‘Back to the Land’ rallying cry.

The electricity in my house is off again (I think it is the seventh time). This time I have not been disconnected; I am told there is a problem with the cable between the pole and the house. The workman tells me he has to ‘tighten’ the cable. Apparently electricity doesn’t flow well through saggy cables. He has not told me when he plans to sort out this problem; I have been fridgeless and in darkness for three weeks so far, and if it goes on much longer I may resort to climbing the pole to have a go at tightening that cable myself. Actually I am not really complaining; many people here are not connected to electricity at all, even in the urban areas. And I am pleased to still have piped water; I have learned that I would much rather do without electricity than without water. In the darkness you can always light a candle, but when the water is off you cannot drink paraffin, and it is not so easy to wash in lemonade.

Some of my fellow volunteers are going home, either permanently or for a holiday. Soon there will be not many of us remaining here. I recently had a short trip to northern Senegal (which I plan to write about next) but other than that I have no plans to travel away just now - I have plenty of work to keep me going at the moment! I have written a third chapter about my work, which you can access by clicking on Justin’s Work 3.

Read Justin’s Work 1

Read Justin’s Work 2

Read Justin’s Work 3

June 4, 2008

Long Walk

Filed under: Current — jitg @ 2:18 pm

 

 

June has arrived. I have been here 16 months, and next weekend I will celebrate my five hundredth day! Yesterday some one-year volunteers who arrived in September finished their placements and boarded homeward planes. It is odd to see ‘new’ people who arrived more recently than me already moving on. It makes me feel a long way from home. Thank you to all who keep in touch with me, by email and letter. It is good to hear from you; thank you very sincerely.

This morning I woke up and found nine mosquitoes inside my net. I must have done something wrong; I will be more diligent about tucking the net in! Luckily the marmite and garlic puree I spread all over my body repelled them, so I do not have too many bites; one thing I do not need is a bout of malaria. I had a fun few minutes chasing the mozzies around the net and splatting them all.

I have met visitors here who speak about cycling the length of The Gambia, along the July 22nd Highway. I have never met anyone who has actually done this, but have spoken to a few who talk about it. And I have heard of two individuals who set out to canoe along the river, from the Senegal border in the East all the way to Banjul. Neither of them finished, but one got some good close up photographs of crocodile smiles. And then I have another friend who intends to trek the length of the country by horse.

I have done none of these. But between February and May I walked the breadth of The Gambia at its widest portion along the coast, in stages over seven days with a friend, Louise, who works out here for Concern Universal. It is not the most impressive long walk of all time, but it was an enjoyable expedition all the same. Follow this link to read more about my coast walk.

 

May 15, 2008

Earning Money

Filed under: Current — jitg @ 10:08 am

So my lizard is fine, but she is not doing her job properly; there are still cockroach in my kitchen. But at least I don’t have weevils in my pasta.

My SQAD team are busy at work this week. We are preparing to present our work to the Co-ordinating Committee Meeting of the Department of State. We will describe our plans for a Quality Assurance Framework for education in The Gambia, and will run a series of activities designed to elicit feedback, both positive and not-so-positive no doubt. This is a week-long meeting with a large number of delegates, so we are preparing carefully. It should take place next week in Farafenni, but I have learned not to count on published dates or venues, so we will see.

As I move around the Gambia, I see hundreds of different ways in which people make their living. It is not easy to find work, so people have to be creative and flexible about how they earn their daily bread, or daily rice. If you wish to read more on this, follow this link to an article called Livelihoods.

May 6, 2008

Lizard

Filed under: Current — jitg @ 3:19 pm

My lizard is alive!! Until yester day I had not seen her for several weeks. But I was packing things away in the kitchen last night and there she was, sat on the wall behind a chopping board. She stared at me accusingly for a couple of moments and then scampered away. She clung briefly to the underside of a shelf, and then squeezed into a gap at the top of the window. I am pleased to see her. I have missed her company but more than that I am glad to have a lizard in the kitchen to eat insects. There are too many mosquitoes and a few cockroach in my house, and the lizard is helpful to control these uninvited populations.

On a stretch of the highway near my house, a number of people sell what I believe to be second-hand goods from Europe. I presume that those who have kindly donated these things innocently believe that their cast-offs are going to a good cause (and indeed they are, but not as direct gifts). The reality is that there are not many free handouts here; if something has value then someone will find a way of making money from it. The same is true of donated rice from Japan and Taiwan; much of the rice to be found in the market come from sacks printed with “Food Aid – Not to be Sold”.

So there is a ‘jumble sale’ of second hand goods along the highway; clothes, toys, saucepans, glassware and crockery, and bits of computers. It is amazing how out-of-place some of this stuff appears to be. Not many people use saucepans; most people cook on a fire so anything with a plastic handle is useless. Crockery and cutlery are rarely used too; most of my neighbours eat with their hands from the communal bowl. Few people here have much use for wine glasses, hair straighteners, toasters or video tapes. Some of the clothing is in good condition. But fabric and clothes are a good price here anyway, and tailoring is one industry that thrives.

Then there are bits of computers – there are charities (eg. ComputerAid) dedicated to taking discarded computers to places like this. It is kind of people to bother. I know that people in schools and offices want to pass on their out-of-date machines to someone, and not simply throw them out. And some are put to good use. There are a scattering of internet cafes around that use PCs donated in this way. But many end up in landfill. They are old and not quite working. Some could be coaxed into life by an experienced technician but very few people here have that kind of expertise. It might be more appropriate to lend support to the $100 laptop scheme (see: Wikipedia and BBC News article).

We have received a whole bunch of new computers at work recently. My colleagues are very pleased, and are learning how to play FreeCell. However, in the absence of coherent strategy and training the provision of advanced ICT sadly causes as many problems as it solves in a place like this. I suspect that the main beneficiaries of such aid packages are the computer manufacturers and traders, and that the gain for Africa is limited. This country would be better served by poverty-reduction measures, not fancy toys that will soon break.

Blog at WordPress.com.