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Sunday 15th July 2007 We stop at the police checkpoint just outside of town and after I wake the three officers, who are sleeping in their car they try to phone to arrange an escort for us. After 10 minutes of trying however, they’ve not been able to reach anybody – on the radio or phone. This doesn’t really instil me with much confidence! After totally failing to contact the relevant superiors, they tell us that it’s safe to travel south for at least the first 80km; the trouble spots are in the 40km before Biharamulo. Just a few kilometres into the drive, I hear a familiar sound. The screeching from the gearbox, the lack of any power and we’ve worn through another drivemember.
It takes under an hour to replace, this time I know exactly what I’m doing, make no mistakes and we’re away, leaving behind the crowd of onlookers which had arrived from the nearby village. Arriving at the roadblock 40km before Biharamulo, the sleepy officer (it’s around 11am now) tells us there’s no escort, but it ‘should be safe’. There’s no real choice for us here – we have to continue without an escort. Kaplan is used to this tension – he’s been in the Israeli military for three years, patrols through hostile territory are nothing new for him. The road is OK, bad in parts, but each corner we turn we’re expecting to see some boulders across the road (the shifta’s favourite tactic for stopping vehicles). Seeing an army jeep with a rear mounted machine gun and an officer reading a map of the area gives me a mixed feeling of increased apprehension and comfort.
The end of the road finally arrives, I’ve been pushing M quite hard through the last section and she’s done well. Taking an easterly course, heading through small villages towards Shinyanga we’re relieved we have no Bandit stories to tell. The roads are wide but heavily corrugated, presumably due to the huge trucks bringing building materials to the road project north of us. Progress is steady, and by late afternoon I’m looking for a place for us to sleep.
First things first, we light a fire and kill the chicken. In hindsight, it would have been better to do those things in reverse – our chicken (which I’ve named ‘Snack’) is a little frightened firstly by us Muzungu’s and secondly by the sight of a roaring fire. Dolors is extremely reluctant to do the deed, and after a few minutes of coercion the head’s off and the chicken’s spraying blood all over my trousers and shoes. I must say, I’d rather kill it than hold the body as it kicks and struggles in your hands… The killing doesn’t take that long, but the final kicks and spasms take quite a while to end. There’s no moon tonight – the third day I’ve not seen any moon. After dinner (or should I say Snack?), I sit back and marvel at the stars above. The sky here is alien to me – I look hard, but find no familiar stars. There’s almost no light pollution here, our cigarettes and head torches are probably some of the worst offenders for a few hundred kilometres. |