Wednesday, 5 December 2012

A sea view


December 3

First day at work. The offices are a five minute walk from the hotel and they are right on the seafront. I was collected by the administration manager, a giant of a man. The offices are part of a little complex of cafes and restaurants and very much more pleasant than the area around the hotel. I did not even realize how close to the sea we are. I have met Jerzy the Polish photographer and off-road specialist who took me out in his four-wheel drive to see some ruins and to off-road on the nearby sand dunes. That was a pleasant surprise.  The sense here is that it is up to us to set our agenda, which is liberating.

Jerzy gave me the lowdown on what happened to the old team. Suffice to say that the emergency team brought in includes some very good journalists, including Jamie who I worked with today, a travel journalist with a great track record. He gave me some writing assignments. He also told me how the press day did not finish until 1 am. That could prove tricky if it happens every week. It’s not how things were described to me on the phone.

The offices are very pleasant with a balcony overlooking the waters of the Gulf. Sutton or Hammersmith this ain’t. I have been given a new Mac, some pocket money and in general I feel pretty positive about the new beginning. I still can’t get onto a proxy for Skype. Jamie suggested one but it is taking time to let me use it. Meanwhile my new Sim is not working so I have gone back to my British one. Return to my hotel in improved mood. It feels less like a dream now.

I fell asleep at 830 but was awoken by pumping techno at 11. Another broken night’s sleep.


Loved ones behind the Oman curtain


December 2, 2012

I’ve discovered that Skype is blocked in the Sultanate but there are proxies that work.  The hotel have kindly given me free wifi and helped me to sort out communications. Facebook seemed to work. If you transgress in your web use, a screen comes up to tell you you are using a service blocked because it does not conform to the societal norms of the Sultanate.
With the help of the hotel manager, I was able to find a way round this. Seeing Amali and Tanushka was wonderful and also a reminder of this new situation. I could have cried as Amali said ‘I want a cuddle.’ She kissed me on the screen. I did the whole thing on my phone but will try with the computer next time as quality of sound and image left something to be desired.

I found the local Cold Store – mini market. It even had a few vegetables and fruit. This part of town, which I think is the souk, has row on row of trading stores and stores with no products or people in. The muezzin nearby is the worst I have heard in my travels in the Islamic world – it is almost as if he is trying to make the ugliest call to prayer possible. It is ten to five now and the sun is lowering. The temperature outside was very pleasant when I ventured out. We are in south Asia, which is not necessarily a bad thing, but I know it could be a bad thing if Tanushka is ever going to move here. I need to find a place to live that is tolerably pleasant without costing the earth. If these things don’t match up then it will not work. But I must do at least a year and once one is in winter again there is no point in rushing home. I hear snow is sweeping Britain! I can hear the 5.30 call to prayer.

Monday, 3 December 2012

The 16 year itch


1 December

I never really forgave myself for leaving Caracas as early as I did, when the adventure had just begun. Somewhere, even though I was returning home to take a job at a prestigious national newspaper, I felt I had done myself and Venezuela a disservice. Deep down, my self-image as a journalist was wrapped up in the idea of the flawed and fatally romantic foreign correspondent, the kind that lived in the novels of Graham Greene. They were escaping from something in their past, and invariably ended up in a sultry, corrupt place where they lived out a kind of exile. Eventually they would become embroiled in a world of conflict and intrigue that they were outside of but fatally drawn into.

And so it is, 16 years later, that I find myself in a strange land again, this time in Asia. Since I began to spread the news of my new posting , I have taken great pleasure in witnessing first people’s surprise, and then a look of puzzlement. Oman? Gosh, now where is that? Curious, educated people, but they just can’t place it. Yes, that’s the place, the one you can’t quite place. It’s on the map somewhere but I’ll be damned if you can actually find it.

Then I was 27, now I am 44. That should mean that I am wiser. It certainly means I am no longer as foolhardy but then again, as the events of this first day have shown, I can still be a fool. When I reached departures at Gatwick, the Emirates woman asked me for my passport. I looked at it and I knew I had done something stupid. I had brought the wrong one. I felt panic. Don’t worry, she said, it is still valid. After all my farewells, it would be too much to have to turn round and go home again. Doh! So she let me through.

The flight was delayed by an hour. It all went smoothly after that – the flight to Dubai watching movies, rushing through Dubai’s vast duty free emporium.  Waiting forever in the bus to get on the next plane. I got to passport control at the sleepy little aerodrome at Muscat, where the visa man  asked me what football team I supported. He had seen Liverpool listed as my birthplace and that was enough. He asked me the question in the manner of the border inquisitor – did I support Liverpool? Well, yes, when I was younger, when I watched football at all. He shook his head. I can’t let you through, he said. I laughed and, after some more probing by him, realized that he was a Manchester United fan.  

Eventually he gave me my visa – he was not in a hurry at all - and I headed for passport control. The guy in the white garb and traditional Omani headwear, an attractive turban-like hat, looked at the passport and at me and at his computer screen. I knew something was up. He asked if I had been to Oman before and – knowing as I did that there was no Omani stamp in the passport – I said yes. Truth was the best course.  Then he got up and called his superior. I have been in a few tight spots at borders previously, the hairiest of all being the Colombian crossing at Santa Anna. By comparison, this was ordered and polite. The superior told me that the passport I had with me was listed as lost/stolen on the system. He called me into an office where the Sultan looked down, a little awkwardly, in a sharp blue uniform. I pleaded silently for him to understand my plight and give me his blessing. A policeman, coincidentally called Sultan something according to his badge, asked me where my new passport was. Back home. “Story, history’ he kept saying. The other guy interpreted, asking when I had reported this passport lost. I told him. It checked out. The Omani Police Interpol computer said in big red letters something uncompromising, like Not Valid but more serious. As I stood there waiting for bureaucratic procedures to be followed by the policeman and the pleasant border official, I felt as if Greene’s ghost was very close.  Passports from around the world were framed on the wall. The office, with its shoulder-height glass partitions and big old fashioned desk, brought to mind Casablanca and black and white films. This was just as it should be, and it pleased me, although I had no desire to be put on the first plane home. 

After a few minutes they told me my passport was blacklisted and then, without fuss, they stamped it. They wrote some notes in Arabic in a huge old fashioned ledger and they gave me my passport back. ‘Shukran jazeeran’ I said in halting half remembered Arabic. I could have hugged them, if I wasn’t being mindful of etiquette. I rushed through to left luggage, found my bag and went through customs. My driver was nowhere to be seen. The first cash machine said try again later. The second one gave me money. I sat down at a Costa Coffee and drank some water. Then a young guy in T-shirt and half length pants came up with a name card and asked if I was Joe. I was relieved. He didn’t speak English but I followed him to the car. He gave me a new sim for my phone, and drove me to my hotel. 

We were in Seeb, which is sleepy and green, with low white buildings. It feels South Asian, but neater. The hotel is probably two or three star. The reception is dark with gloomy décor. Yusef is very tired and I let him go, thanking him. I find my room and let myself in. I am alone in a strange hotel in a strange land. I realize I can’t turn back and that I have left my family back in England, my beloved wife and daughter. But here I am, at dawn, in my hotel room. I feel elated, as if I am in a living dream. Today is Sunday, which is a working day in Oman, but since I have had no sleep, and know that I don’t start work till tomorrow, I have a shower to wash of the grime of economy class and then a shot of whisky. What is this new phase of life? It has begun. I’m too nervous and excited to sleep. I’ve lost four hours due to the time zone change.  Perhaps I am in Interzone. I must sleep.