Africa
Archived Posts from this Category
Archived Posts from this Category
Posted by Caitlin on 10 Nov 2008 | Tagged as: Africa, Asia, Ethics, Europe, Events, Trends
Congratulations to BeWILDerwood, Africa’s Eden and Ngong Ping 36O and all the award-winning travel writers.
I have been a member of the British Guild of Travel Writers for about a year now. It’s a professional organisation and you are only eligible to join if you can demonstrate that you are making a living substantially from travel writing, whether that be books or articles. Membership entitles you to have your name listed in the Year Book, which goes out to all members and other industry professionals who pay to receive it, and use of the snazzy new website where you can build a mini-website or network virtually with other members. You also get a membership card and various discounts but I think the biggest benefit is the opportunity to network with other writers and travel professionals at the regular Guild events.
The star event on the Guild calendar, apart from the AGM, is the annual awards dinner. It was hosted last night at the Marriott in Grosvenor Square and it was a great night. We started with a champagne reception with Jersey oysters and then moved into the main room for dinner. The food at awards events can often be a bit rubbish but last night’s meal was really good - it was a collaboration between the Marriott’s restaurant Maze (part of the Gordon Ramsay empire) and the island of Jersey (one of the sponsors), so we had Jersey crab for starters and Jersey vegetables with our lamb for main course, and Jersey cream with our dessert.
There were actually two sets of awards - the Tourism Awards where members vote on the best tourism projects around the world and the Members Awards for travel writing published in the past year. The Tourism Awards were announced before dinner, the Members Awards between starter and main course and then the raffle (to raise money for the Back Up Trust, a spinal injury charity) before dessert.
I’d come along to a Guild meeting a few months ago to hear the nominations for the Tourism Awards and vote on the short list. The final winners were then determined by a vote of the entire membership by post and email. So I was familiar with the nominations but I didn’t know who had actually won until the night. I was really thrilled because all the projects I voted for won their categories! So congratulations to BeWILDerwood in Norfolk for best UK project, Africa’s Eden or Loango National Park in Gabon for best non-UK project, and Ngong Ping 360 in Hong Kong for best global project.
I’m almost tempted to borrow children and take them to BeWILDerwood as the description of this place really captured my imagination. It’s a treetop adventure playground - with treehouses, aerial ropewalks and zipwires, boats and boardwalks - built on 50 acres of woodland and marshland. It’s very eco-friendly - it’s all built from sustainable wood, the entire site is pesticide free, and they’ve planted a lot of trees as well. Among the magical creatures who live there are Mildred, the vegetarian Crocklebog who lives in the Scary Lake, and Swampy a March Boggle. There is nothing modern about BeWILDerwood, although the guy who built it has said he was partly inspired by 90s computer game Myst.
If it weren’t so expensive, I would book my ticket to Loango National Park in Gabon tomorrow. The fact that I can’t is partly the point - they are trying to keep tourism numbers low so that it’s sustainable for the park’s ecology and the wellbeing of the people who live there. Rombout Swanborn, the director of Loango National Park, has said: “We will never have 20 Jeeps around a waterhole shining lights into animals’ eyes.”
The president of Gabon set aside 11% of the country as a national park in 2002 - only tiny Costa Rica has preserved a greater proportion of land. Before then tourism was virtually unknown in Gabon but they began developing the industry at this point with the ethos “ecotourism pays for conservation”. Loango National Park opened in 2007, covering grassland, rivers, forest and mangroves and featuring spectacularly varied wildlife, including whales, elephants, hippos, leopards, reptiles and primates. Visitors are accommodated in the eco-friendly lodge and satellite tented camps and wildlife viewing is small-scale with pirogue trips, forest treks or savannah drives. There are 500 Gabonese in the area with nearly 100 employed as eco-guides etc, while local farmers sell produce to the lodge, and their children attend a new school built by the park.
Ngong Ping 360 in Hong Kong combines an existing attraction - the Giant Buddha built by the nearby Po Lin monastery on Landau Island - with a new one. Previously there were so many tourists coming to see the Giant Buddha and the strain on the monastery was too much, with monks spending their whole time providing refreshments. Now Ngong Ping 360 is actually bringing more tourists but they’ve actually managed to reduce the impact on the environment and the monastery. The tourists arrive via a 5.7km cable car skyrail - the world’s longest without a car change - so they didn’t have to build a road through the forest. While tourists can still climb up to see the Buddha, Ngong Ping has also built a Chinese cultural village with dining facilities, which has reduced the burden on the monastery. A win-win situation!
All Guild members are eligible to enter their work for the travel writing awards and entries are judged anonymously. The winning pieces are published in a glossy booklet, which made highly entertaining reading on my Tube ride home at the end of the night. I believe they will also be posted up on the BGTW website at some point as well. Congratulations all!
Posted by Caitlin on 26 Sep 2008 | Tagged as: Africa, Photo post
Uganda; April 2006
I had the privilege to go to Uganda to write about a sustainable coffee project in April 2006. It was my first time in Africa, though not my last; I’ve since been to Tanzania, Senegal and Tunisia.
Uganda is a country that has suffered enormously in modern times, particularly in the 1970s under the ruthless Idi Amin. In some places, entire villages were wiped out. Certainly the natural landscape bears the scars of this era, with many of the forests felled and wildlife hunted out for food.
Yet everywhere we went, we were welcomed by happy, smiling people who seemed genuinely excited and pleased to see us. The reception of some of the children, crowding in and waving, made me feel like a queen!
Unlike in the Kilimanjaro region of Tanzania, where exposure to tourists has taught people to expect payment for having their photo taken, everyone was delighted to pose for photographs and when I showed them the image in my digital view finder it was, for some, the first image of themselves they’d ever seen. On my return to London, I printed copies and sent them back care of the coffee company to give back to the villages.
This post is part of Photo Friday, hosted by Debbie at DeliciousBaby. For all of this week’s submissions, see here.
Posted by Caitlin on 01 Dec 2007 | Tagged as: Africa, Articles
By Caitlin Fitzsimmons
It’s morning in Dakar and in the centre of town the Sandega Market is heaving. A rainbow jumble of fabrics tumbles out of wheelbarrows, or is piled high on trestle tables and hung from cars. Household goods and children’s toys are on sale alongside artworks and bead jewellery, while roaming merchants selling sunglasses and mobile phone cards work the crowd. Young women with straightened or braided hair strut along the street in groups of twos and threes, dressed in tight jeans and low-cut tops, or closely fitted, brightly coloured African dresses with matching headpieces.
Senegal is open and friendly to foreigners and prides itself on being a “Teranga” state - a notion of welcome and hospitality promoted by both Islam and Catholicism, the two main religions. The sea brings coastal breezes, taking the tropical heat down a notch or two, and providing glimpses of blue around almost every street corner. The Senegalese have music in their blood and artists such as Youssou N’Dour have won fame on the world stage. The other great passion is football and the daily matches on the dusty football pitches of Dakar have produced some world-class players. We arrived in Dakar on the same flight as Senegalese striker El Hadji Diouf ,who plays for the Bolton Wanderers, and he was mobbed by a crowd waving camera phones.
But Dakar is changing. There is construction on every street and new hotels are springing up along the waterfront. The city is being wired for the 21st century and free wireless internet seems to be a standard feature in most central hotels.
Socially, it’s changing too. Chinese immigrants starting coming in significant numbers about five years ago, pulled by economic factors and encouraged by the Chinese government. Official numbers are that there are 150 Chinese families - 200-300 people - in Dakar but unofficial estimates are much higher. Some come to work in the construction industry or road building but most go into business in the newly emerging Chinatown, along a long boulevard lined with trees and shops north of the city centre.
One of the pioneers was Hu Yan, a 42 year-old businessman, who moved from China 14 years ago and set up shop in Centenaire. Others followed and Hu estimates there are now 1,000 Chinese people in total living in Dakar, with 100 shops between them. Senegal might seem an unlikely destination for the great Chinese dream of immigration but for many people options are limited and it’s better than what they left behind. “China is a poor place and here they can make money,” Hu says. “Those that go to high school go to the US or Europe if they can, but the men who come to Africa never go to high school, just middle school.”
As well as business opportunities, immigration is also a way to escape China’s One Child policy and many Chinese migrants in Dakar have two or three children. “In China you can only have one but you can make another child here with dual nationality,” Hu explains. “It’s a route to go to Europe or America. You make money here, have another child, and the children can go to an American or French school.”
The Chinese traders import clothing, particularly womens’ shoes, as well as consumer durables such as glassware, and electronic goods such as televisions. Their arrival has transformed the lives of Senegalese consumers, through the wide availability of products and cheap prices. People come from all over Senegal and even further afield to shop at the Chinese market, such as Maryam from the Ivory Coast, who we met as she shopped for shoes with her friend Mami from Dakar. “I like the Chinese shoes better,” Mami says, inspecting a pair of sparkly flip flops. “They are cheaper.”
But it’s been less welcome for the Senegalese traders, who complain bitterly about the Chinese.
The traders at the African market tell me the Chinese are “no good”, and they sell only cheap plastic rubbish. Ass Sene, who runs a shop selling African textiles and crafts in the Centre Commercial Ass Khalifa near Sandega, describes the damage the Chinese competition has inflicted on his business. “The market is broken,” he says. “There are many, many Chinese people. It’s no good. Chinese people are no good. We buy our material from Senegal but the Chinese bring it from China. It’s a cheaper price but it’s not good material. Many, many Senegalese buy from the Chinese. Business was better before the Chinese.”
Senegalese traders, led by business organisation UNACOIS, went on strike in 2004 to demand caps on Chinese immigration. Antoine Diouf, editor in chief of the local newspaper L’obs Observateur, recalls the protest, which he says was peaceful but ultimately ineffective. “They were protesting to ask the government to stop the Chinese people in Dakar - they were angry because the Chinese people sell products not very expensively and people preferred to go to Chinese shops,” Diouf says. “There was no violence, just protests in the streets to show the administration they were not happy and then the government asked them to stop [so they did].”
But not everyone wants the Chinese to go. With many basic goods within reach of ordinary Senegalese for the first time, consumers are determined to keep the lower prices. Also, since all Chinese shopkeepers employ local staff, many young men owe their jobs to the Chinese. Momar Ndao, the president of the Senegalese consumers’ association Ascosen, says his organisation made a protest to counter the traders and argue that the Chinese should stay. He claims the Senegalese traders were rorting their customers with grossly inflated prices, charging up to 10 times more than the Chinese for the same products. “If it was different goods it would be acceptable but it was the same goods - they go to China, buy the same goods and sell 10 times higher,” Nadao says. He adds that Senegalese consumers shop with the Chinese by preference because they know the prices are better.
The Chinese traders have not only led to reduced prices for consumers but also expanded the range of products available. “Glasses to drink water were very expensive and in some parts of the country they didn’t use glasses but plastic cups, which is not very hygienic because you can’t sterilise them,” Ndao says. “When the Chinese people came the price for these basic goods became in reach for many poor people.”
Ndao says that Senegal must protect its reputation as a “Teranga” state and make foreigners feel welcome. He argues that if the Chinese people have correct immigration papers, are registered for business and obey the law, they should be allowed to stay. “We say it’s xenophobia sending back people of another complexion skin - if we are ‘Teranga’ state we have to be open with other countries,” Ndao says.
The Chinese also bring employment - most shops employ two or three Senegalese people and reportedly pay up to a third more than the minimum wage. Kemo Bojang, 23, is one young Senegalese who has found work in the Chinese market. He is not directly employed but instead works for himself, and is able to make a good living reselling goods acquired from the Chinese.
“They are my friends,” he says. “They bring many jobs.”
The problem between the Chinese and the Senegalese is economic rather than social but there is little interaction between the two communities outside of work. The Chinese cluster in areas, living near their businesses and socialising only with other Chinese, if at all. Mei Young-Hung, 42, says she works so hard, there is little time left for making friends. She moved to Senegal five years ago with her husband, leaving her two grown-up children behind in China. “I came only for business,” she says. “When I don’t have another job, I sleep or watch TV.” She proudly shows off her new television set, imported directly from China and showing Chinese programming.
Some people, even supporters of the Chinese, believe there is a risk of social unrest if Chinatown grows too much bigger without greater integration with the Senegalese. “If a lot of them live in a local part of town and we see something like a Chinatown then that splits the population from the rest of the population and that can be difficult,” says Ascosen’s Ndao. “I think they have to be in many places - the government should give them the chance to live in other places in Dakar, although I think they like Centenaire.”
There are exceptions - such as Hadina, who sells shoes on Centenaire and has lived in Senegal for five years. She speaks the local Wolof language as well as Chinese and has a Senegalese husband and two young children. The Chinese arrive in Senegal without any language skills but they learn both French and Wolof from their employees and in turn teach them Mandarin. There has been very little trouble between the Chinese and Senegalese so far, despite the tensions over trade, but there has been some conflict within the Chinese community. One Chinese trader, who wishes to remain anonymous, says some of his fellow countrymen have even resorted to guns to resolve their differences. “Between the Chinese there are a lot of problems because they compete and no one wants to be under another,” he says. “If you say you are the top here, other one say no.”
The Chinese immigration comes against the backdrop of growing inter-governmental friendship between Senegal and China. Senegal, which previously aligned itself to Taiwan, resumed diplomatic ties with China in 2006 and declared that there was only one China in the world and Taiwan was an integral part of its territory. Taiwan cut ties in protest, accusing China of “buying” Senegal with the pledge of $US600 million in aid. China is also interested in Africa for its natural resources and a number of Chinese companies are setting up in Senegal to export minerals such as phosphates.
The Chinese government has been actively encouraging its people to emigrate to Senegal. Many of the shopkeepers on Centenaire came from Hunan Province on the south bank of the Yangtze River and say they received funding from the Chinese authorities to move to Senegal. Without a radical change in policy in both China and Senegal, the numbers of Chinese will only increase, opening more shops and bringing more trade.
It’s not good news for their Senegalese competitors, but cosmopolitan Dakar with its tradition of “Teranga” seems well equipped to cope.
This article was first published in Anyway magazine in June 2007. Copyright held by Caitlin Fitzsimmons and all rights reserved.
Guide to Dakar | What you need to know