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[Nigeria]Nigerian glossary

2007-02-13

BBC article on Abuja

Filed under: VSO — kevin @ 12:18

It’s good to see that the BBC has finally noticed the reality of Abuja rather than just following the official line about how shiny and modern the city is.

The contrast between the city centre and the “satellite towns” is amazing, from multi-lane expressways to dirt roads in a few hundred metres. Most people working in Abuja can’t afford to live in the city, having to commute in every day. Some of my former colleagues at Radio Nigeria travelled in from as far away as Keffi because that was the nearest place they could afford a decent home for their families. This isn’t easy or cheap given the lack of good public transport.

Although the FCDA claim to be enforcing the “master plan” they seem to be doing so in a way that ignores the idea of building neighbourhoods and providing housing for all levels of society. So long as your mansion is in a residential area and isn’t built on what should be a park it doesn’t matter that there should be tens of houses in the space you’re taking up for one.

On a technical note, the link to Google’s map of Keffi shows that their idea of where Abuja is is a bit wrong and some of the roads and place names are slightly suspect too.

Concert at Gamji Gate

Filed under: music,VSO — kevin @ 09:47

Last night I joined Monique, Kristel and Marion at Gamji Gate Auditorium for a free concert organised by the British Council and the Centre for Hausa Cultural Studies. They’d brought over a Muslim hip-hop group from the UK, Mecca 2 Medina, who were collaborating with a group of young traditional Hausa musicians from Kano, Arewa. The whole thing was called “Cultural Rap Rapture” and also included several local musicians.
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2007-02-05

Comments/Contact me

Filed under: site — kevin @ 12:23

If you tried to use one of the “Contact me” links on this site recently you might not have got a reply. I set my spam filtering a little too aggressively and all incoming comments were filed as junk.

I was getting huge numbers of junk comments, people thinking that the links they typed in would appear on the site. That’s not the case, it just annoyed me. I’ve now adjusted the way the “Contact me” form works, it should allow real people to use it but block computer programs.

2007-02-03

Saturday at NTI

Filed under: VSO — kevin @ 13:28

I’m taking advantage of a brief period of NEPA to boil water, listen to music and write this.

As usual for the weekend I got up fairly late this morning, I was out last night with Monique and my friend (and tailor) Otinu.

After breakfast I went kite flying again, Suleiman is getting quite good and the others are improving. The wind was pretty strong today so I had to keep reminding them of safety precautions like not launching the kite when people are in the way! Some of the smaller boys were getting dragged around a bit by the wind. I was watching carefully and made sure they used the safety straps (“kite killers”), that way they can just let go of the handles and the kite will drop out of the sky.

I just had some soup for lunch, I made it on Thursday to use up all the vegetables in the fridge. I think it was carrot, tomato, green pepper, garlic and “american cucumber” (a roundish yellow thing that I think is some kind of squash). As usual, after a few days and a spin in the liquidiser it was even better than when I made it. I enjoy my small culinary successes.

In a little while I’ll have to head off to the market to stock up again, the fridge is looking pretty bare.

2007-01-29

Keeping up to date

Filed under: site,tech — kevin @ 19:21

If you want to be notified of updates to this site there are two ways:

  • RSS: this is part of most modern browsers (even Internet Explorer if you have version 7), the browser will automatically check for site updates and give you an excerpt and a link to the full post. The address should be automatically detected, you’ll see an orange icon in the address bar that you can click on to subscribe. For manual configuration the address is http://www.caboose.org.uk/feed/
  • Mailing list: when I add some significant updates to the site I usually send an email to my kevinnigeria mailing list. To subscribe send an email to:
    kevinnigeria-subscribe at caboose.org.uk

    Don’t worry, you wont be bombarded with email, it’s usually one or two a month.

Lagos

Filed under: travel,VSO — kevin @ 19:09

On the way to and from Ghana we passed through Lagos. I found it much less chaotic than its reputation had led me to expect. Maybe if it’s the first place you see in Nigeria it’s a bit overwhelming but to me it’s just like any Nigerian city but on a larger scale.

One odd experience was visiting the Palms shopping centre, which is packed full of very wealthy Nigerians. It has shops just like you’d see in Western Europe, including a supermarket. I thought it was interesting that a lot of the prices in the supermarket were actually lower than in ordinary Nigerian markets. Of course, the people who’d benefit most from these lower prices probably can’t afford transport to get to Palms and might not be allowed in even if they reached it.

Transport was easy, although Marebec and Dave had been there before and knew where to get buses to various parts of the city. We took one very scary okada in the night, weaving in and out of traffic at speed and hurtling over potholes. I wouldn’t mind if I had any confidence that the riders were in control of their bikes but they’re pretty poor, always either on full throttle or the brake, on sandy roads that means you keep sliding about.

The bridges are one of the distinctive features of Lagos, especially the Third Mainland Bridge. This is the one we took to the airport, it is (or was, not sure) the longest in Africa and is apparently deteriorating badly due to a total lack of maintenance. It’s quite strange to be in a bus, hurtling across a dual-carriageway concrete bridge and looking at stilt houses in the lagoon on one side.

Ghana travel information

Filed under: ghana,travel — kevin @ 18:49

Here is some general information we worked out or picked up as we travelled around Ghana. We used the Bradt Ghana guidebook (3rd edition, 2004) and I recommend it, it’s worth noting that prices for most things have approximately doubled since the guidebook was published.
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Kite flying at NTI

Filed under: VSO — kevin @ 16:44

I brought a Flexifoil Sting 1.2 kite back to Nigeria with me in November (that’s a fairly small power kite, 1.2 square metres). I’ve not had much of a chance to fly it due to lack of wind or other things to do.

Today I finally had the time and the wind was strong enough, so I wandered over to the NTI Staff Primary school football pitch and unpacked the kite.

Me holding kite handles, the kite is visible directly in front of me. A boy flying a kite. A man flying a kite (more…)

2007-01-19

Working in Ibadan

Filed under: travel,VSO — kevin @ 16:26

Just over a week ago I travelled to Ibadan with my colleague Niyi. We were doing some work at NTI’s South-West zonal office, installing some software we had written.

A roundabout with dual carriageway going overhead.  Buses and taxis are picking up passengers all around. A large, newish concrete building painted maroon and cream.  It seems to be getting a bit run down, grass is sprouting through the paving. 'This bus is covered with the blood of Jesus'
On the left is one of the major junctions and public transport hubs in Ibadan, I was staying in a guesthouse nearby. In the middle is the “Oyo State Luxurious Bus Terminal”, very grand but barely used, the buses just sit in the car park beside it. The picture on the right is of the sign at the front of my ABC Transport bus up to Abuja.

I’m beginning to think that somebody is spreading caltrops on the expressway in Ibadan, the ABC bus arrived with a fist-sized hole in one of its tyres. This is not the first time my bus has had a puncture in Ibadan.

2007-01-15

Same city, different viewpoint

Filed under: VSO,web — kevin @ 14:58

I occasionally read naijablog, the blog of an English expat living in Abuja. Sometimes it reminds me how two people can live in the same place but see it in a different way.

For example Jeremy is quite fond of saying that the Hilton is Abuja’s city centre, maybe this is true if you’re an expat or an ultra-rich Nigerian. As I saw Abuja it had several smaller centres, spread across the different districts.

For example, for the part of town close to Radio House the centre was the square outside the Garki Area 7 Shopping Centre (UTC). During the day this was mostly a car park for the surrounding shopping complex, with a few small stalls selling videos and phone accessories on the road side. In the evening there were suya stalls and young people playing basketball, pool and table tennis. Sadly, last time I was in Abuja it was fenced off and something was being constructed on it, a loss of a useful public space.

Other districts have their own centres, although the demolitions in Abuja have damaged or destroyed many of them. Wuse Zone 4 had it’s collection of shops, restaurants and bars demolished last year but people still congregate in the area in the evening. Garki Area 2 has a small market and shops around its Shopping Complex.

It seems these centres were designed-in as part of Abuja’s master plan, each district having a “corner shop” or “shopping centre”. The current interpretation of the plan is that these should be (yet more) ugly shopping plazas rather than open, public spaces.

I don’t know the more upmarket parts of town (Wuse II, Maitama, Asokoro) very well but they too probably have some kind of “centre”, you just have to look around you and maybe sometimes walk rather than driving from place to place in air-conditioned isolation.

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