Tuesday, 31 July 2007

Niamey, offal, nicknames, and banditry

So I'm arrived on Monday morning, a little under two hours late, after an impromptu three-and-a-half hour wait for my flight out of Casablanca, which was two hours late. The only good thing about this was that I got talking to a Peace Corps volunteer called Tina who was heading back to Niamey after her holiday, so I had some insider info on the place when I got in, and thanks to her fluency in Hausa, I didn't get fleeced for the taxi into town.

It was 27 degrees when I landed at 5am and got progressively hotter from there, so I went to bed until just after noon under the AC, then headed down to the hospital to try to find my contact there. The third doctor I tried had heard of her and sent me off to a clinic up the road; I arrived just after she'd left, so then had to wait around for a Dr. Cheikh so I could get her phone number.

My slight unease at the absence of any central admin type office and my near-total reliance on one person was allayed by the fact everyone was so helpful - Dr. Cheikh was chatty, kept saying he was sure there would be no problems in a way which suggested pasty white people turned up in his clinic wanting to do electives roughly every second monday, and even lied about the quality of my French on several occasions.


So I left to wander around the city, which is quite pleasant. Although there's almost no grass, meaning that underfoot is either bitty tarmac or a reddish-orange dirt. The buildings are mainly concrete, although from the taxi ride in it looks like there are mud-brick and thatch areas on the outskirts. None of them are particularly attractive, however, and there's no Sheraton hotel here to dazzle among the shanty-towns and to allow Brangelina to stay in it while picking some poor orphan who will, over time, realise that they've traded the squalor of poverty for the degradations of a brief movie/musical/famous-for-being-famous career followed by a succession of stints in rehab and the front pages of most newspapers, culminating in a death from overdose or in a carcrash which may even be younger than they'd have got had they stayed put. There are some quite bizarrely attractive government buildings like the Ministry for Energy, which I will attempt to photograph later. Generally, though, it's a city plonked down in a bit of desert which happens to have a river nearby - so it's dry, dusty, and seriously, seriously hot. I got tanned yesterday wearing factor 40 - it's that hot.

Last night involved calling Dr. Marianne, and then heading out for dinner and drinks with a bunch of the Peace Corps lot (Tina, Noah, Emily, Whitney, and someone else). I say "someone else" because one of the first bits of info I got was that they are only all in Niamey every couple of months - normally they're out in villages (<1000 people, no electricity or running water, etc) where they work with the local people doing health education and so on. Part of the deal is that their host families give them names in the local language, i.e. which they can pronounce (apparently "Whitney" is impossible). The guy whose name I can't remember was given the nickname "Rashid", and although he is never called that by the other yanks, it removed any possibility I would remember his actual name. We went to a bar out west of the hospital (marked on the map above above the last R of 'river') and drank 60p giant bottles of beer; as ever, I fell asleep for about 20 mins in the middle of the evening, but woke up in time to head outside and find some street food. The others ordered rice and potatoes which the woman fished from the cauldron of meat sauce; thinking this a really poor option, I went for rice-and-meat. The sauce was great, but the meat was basically tubes - I couldn't decide if they were aorta or windpipe, but probably the former - so I think I'm going to stick to the potatoes next time...

This morning I checked out of the expensive hotel I'd been in the first night (28 quid a night!) and into the Catholic mission (7 quid a night) which is central, clean, and looks good. I also met Dr. Marianne in person, although this also involved running around with her while she helps Dr. Borreima organise a UNICEF conference on maternal and paediatric health. This will I'm sure be pretty interesting (and I may get to go), but meetings about it are not so interesting, and I battled manfully to stay awake. However, everything looks set for the elective, and I've decided to split it between paediatrics and internal medicine...so we shall see how that pans out.

The only other thing I must add is that if any of you are thinking of going on holiday, don't take traveller's cheques. Amex charge a flat fee of ten quid however much you exchange, and the bank takes another 2%; so if you try to change 100 euros, you end up paying 20% in fees. When you then try to change 400 euros, you get told you can only change a maximum of 200 a week. The fees on this mean that the bank gets 2%, Amex get just over 9%, and you get shafted. Had I taken it all in cash and been robbed, I'd have paid less for the excess on my insurance than I would in fees to Amex on the traveller's cheques I've brought...

I'm off to find something for dinner that isn't mostly offal. Bye for now.

Monday, 30 July 2007

Arrival

I'm here - the flight was uneventful bar my bag getting stopped going through the scanner (me: is it the wind-up torch? guard: no. unpack everything. outcome: it was the windup torch), reading the final Harry Potter, and having sprite spilt over me by a clumsy steward.

Niamey so far: hot. Very hot. More to follow - I'm running out of time at the internet cafe...

Tuesday, 24 July 2007

Pre-departure panic


Well, it's not all a panic - I've spent the fortnight before I go in the USA, mostly New York, with a brief trip to Washington DC. Regular readers (I like to pretend you exist: humour me) will recall the life-changing experience which was the Elective Portfolio and how much I felt I grew in a very real sense as a person while completing it. It made me realise the importance of adjusting my personal lifestyle choices and using the elective period to examine whether I'm leading the life I want to; with this in mind, I decided that an orgy of clothes shopping, double-chilliburgers, chocolate milkshakes, and the purchase of expensive electrical gadgets was the best way to prepare myself for visiting the poorest country in the world. Because it will, er, make me appreciate the contrast more, notwithstanding that I'd have to be the sort of person suited only for a job administrating the more pointlessly sadistic components of a medical curricululm not to have recognised this beforehand.

Anyway. My current concerns revolve around the amount of time I've left myself between getting back and leaving; I thought three days would be ample, but unfortunately one is a saturday and another a sunday. Oops. This means friday is going to be insanely busy, and I suspect I will forget at least two very important things. But hey. So long as I remember the suncream and the travel insurance, it's all good.

And the foreign currency.

And my passport.

And our nice red robes...