(Alright, I know I said this blog would be Chicago-based, but I'm too lazy to put this anywhere else.)
This is the first post describing 72 very eventful hours Susan and I spent in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Apparently, what happens in the Congo does not stay there.
Part 1: Getting to the DRC
Scene:
Africa, February, 2012
A trip to
Africa. We had an exciting itinerary planned: Following a short stay in
Nairobi, we were heading to the Democratic Republic of Congo to spend a day
with endangered mountain gorillas and climb a an active volcano. Unbelievable,
right?
We flew
into Nairobi the night before we departed for Congo. Nairobi can be broken down
into a simple set of positives and negatives.
The
positives: It costs slightly less to fly into Nairobi than the nearby cities of
Entebbe (Uganda), Kigali (Rwanda) or Dar Es Salaam (Tanzania).
The
negatives: Nairobi is a shithole. This is a city roughly as large as New York
that has maybe four traffic lights and no roads bigger than two lanes. The city
is redolent with Eau de Open Sewer. Our hotel employed five security guards to
prevent our, what, murder? Robbery?
We stayed
only one terrible day in Nairobi before beginning our journey to the Congo. Our
ride to the airport was arranged through the hotel’s official taxi driver,
Solomon. The day before, Solomon had driven us around for four hours, confirming
our initial impressions of Nairobi. Solomon was about sixty, and was VERY in
touch with his own emotions: He repeatedly confessed to us that he loved us
like his own children, children who paid him $55 for four hours’ work (OK, he
left that last part out). However, Solomon hadn’t tried to kill or rob us. This
meant that he was our most trusted ally in this godforsaken city. We accepted
his offer.
“Solomon,
how long does it take to get to the airport?” I asked.
“Oh, could
take two, three hours,” Solomon replied.
We left at
5:45 AM for our 11 AM flight. We were at the airport by 6:15.
The sense
that Solomon had failed us lasted only until we tried to enter the airport.
We’d come through Nairobi International at 2 AM two days earlier; now, it was a
madhouse. It took us almost two hours just to get in the front door of the
airport. Organized chaos would at least have been organized. I swear to God, I
think we saw someone trying to take a chicken on a flight.
We reached
the front counter around 8:30, slid our passports across the desk to the
ruddy-faced agent for Air Kenya… and listened in disbelief as he told us the
airline had absolutely no record of us being on this flight.
Missing
this flight endangered an already-fragile travel schedule. We had only budgeted
three days in the Congo, each one meticulously allocated to activities. Gorilla
permits weren’t cheap. Nor were permits to climb an active volcano, visas,
lodging, and transportation. All told, Susan and I had several thousand dollars
invested in making this flight.
A lady
behind us was late for her flight to Rwanda. We stepped aside to discuss our
situation, and God tossed us a bone.
“Oh, here
you are,” the gate agent said. “You’re on the same flight as this lady. The
8:30 flight.”
Susan and I
checked our watches. It was 8:24 AM. The questions of why the airline would
book us on a different, earlier flight, or why they wouldn’t notify us were
lost. Even after a short time in Africa, we’d learned that if we didn’t move
now, we might be shit out of luck.
I am not
sure how, but we somehow cleared customs, and found ourselves running down the
terminal. Precious seconds ticked by.
“Which
gate?!?” Susan yelled, running ahead as I lumbered behind, carrying our packs.
“Ticket
says Gate 8,” I yelled back.
There was
no agent at Gate 8. There was also no jetway; patrons simply walked out onto
the flight tarmac and boarded whatever plane happened to have an open hatch.
There was a sign by Gate 8, though, which reported that the flight was bound
for Mogadishu, capital of Somalia. Black
Hawk Down Mogadishu.
“Susan,
No!” I yelled, as my fiancĂ© joined a queue of straggling passengers. “It’s
going to Mogadishu! Moga-fucking-dishu!”
Fortunately,
the gate signs were as incorrect as Air Kenya’s ticketing procedure, and our
plane was going somewhere (hopefully) less dangerous. It was not possible to
fly into the DRC (AKA The Democratic Republic of Congo), at least on an airline
that hadn’t crashed in the past three months. Our planned itinerary took us to
Kigali, the capital of Rwanda, from which we would travel overland to the DRC.
As we boarded, however, we were informed the flight would first be making a
stop in Bujumbura, capital of nearby Burundi. It was unclear as to whether this
stop was planned, or merely a whim of the pilot.
Our first
approach to Bujumbura was aborted. Moments from landing, the plane immediately
went to full power and banked away. Having a massive jet plane go from almost landing
to clawing for altitude is terrifying. Over the screaming engines, our captain
explained the landing had been aborted (“No shit,” remarked Susan) because of animals
on the runway. Our second landing attempt was also aborted; People on the
runway this time, reported the captain, in a tone a little too casual for my
liking.
Eventually
we landed. The airport terminal was little more than a shack set into the
jungle. By the runway, perhaps twenty meters from the plane, fishermen were
lined up, plying their trade in a ditch that lined the runway.
Moments
later, we were off to Rwanda and, and hour later, Susan and I crammed ourselves
in a minibus and, at the princely sum of $6 each, were sent speeding away
across the country.
For a country
that’s as legendarily conflict-plagued, Rwanda was a tremendous surprise. The
capital was virtually pristine. Buildings were painted. Outside the capital,
the road dodged between steep, impossibly tall green hills, each covered with a
tidy patchwork of agriculture that separated equally picturesque village. Then,
just when you’re about to forget that you’re in the very heart of chaos, you
see a guy on a skateboard hitching a ride down the highway by grabbing the
bumper of a truck that’s going 50 mph.
Rwanda’s
niceness only served to prime us for how crappy Congo was. We reached Gisenyi,
the border town on the Rwandan side of the Congolese border. Exiting Rwanda was
an orderly, perfunctory affair that took place in a low white building with a
well-manicured lawn. To get to the Congolese side, we walked over a neutral
zone of about 50 yards to a dusty, sagging shack with ‘Immagracion’ scrawled on
the side. A generator roared in the background, powering a single dingy light
bulb. In dormant high school French, Susan indicated our interest in entering
the country and handed over our visas and passports. The agent began entering
our information into a ledger by hand.
Thirty
minutes later, we were still waiting. Tiny African men in ridiculous blue
berets swarmed around, accomplishing little. Susan and I sat helplessly,
longingly looking back at the (literally) greener grass and smiling customs
agents on the Rwandan side of the border*. Finally, our passports were returned.
“Where are our visas?” Susan asked in French. The customs agent spoke a few
words and made a gesture not unlike brushing off a fly. “He says we don’t need
them and that they stay here,” Susan reported glumly. And so we entered Congo,
our legal status a shade of grey.
Part 2: Susan deliberately crashes an armored military vehicle... just to be a bitch.
*When we left the Congo, we finally figured out a big reason for why things were so slow: the entire border operation had only a single passport stamper and only a single inkpad, which had to be laboriously passed around between immigration officers.
*When we left the Congo, we finally figured out a big reason for why things were so slow: the entire border operation had only a single passport stamper and only a single inkpad, which had to be laboriously passed around between immigration officers.
For places like these, you need to budget lots of extra time, but it's good that everything has turned out well.
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