Nigeria - part 2

The Redemption Hotel International was featured in my guidebook, offered “breakfast and varied hot menus” and boasted a prime location next to the inbound long-distance minibus stop. It had a single room, whose double bed was already occupied, inappropriately in such a religious country by a (presumably) unmarried couple of fleas, attested to by occasional but not prolific bites no matter which half of the bed I chose to sleep in. There was electric wiring and sockets in every room, but no actual electricity; each evening a generator would be run for a couple of hours, powering a flickering black and white television through the evening news and an electric lamp to illuminate the evening meal. The family who ran it – Mr George, his wife and her sister – were charming hosts and even better cooks. Full board accommodation including three excellent home-cooked meals every day cost around five pounds despite the artificially inflated currency, and as I needed feeding up after my recent illness, I took most of my meals there.

Management and staff of the Redemption Hotel International

The food consisted mainly of a variety of mildly spiced stews, usually based on fish or chicken, accompanied by either rice or a very filling green staple with a texture halfway between mashed potato and play-dough. I was told this was made from cassava, but when writing this I have browsed the internet to find pictures of something similar without success – nothing I have seen has quite the same intensity of green colour. It was not very varied cuisine, but the possible permutations were increased by a variety of fresh fruit for dessert. My favourite was mango, ripened at source a completely different fruit from mango ripened in a supermarket, soft, properly juicy and sweet, and very messy to eat. Fortunately, although there was no running electricity, there was ample running water, and failing that I had only to step outside and hold out my hands – the rainy season had begun in earnest.
To pass the time, I took the ferry across the river delta to visit some memorials commemorating the early days of the slave trade and a then succession of subsequent 19th century local rulers or Edidems (under British overlordship), splendidly named Eyo Honesty the Second through Eyo Honesty the Sixth. The passengers were mainly tired looking housewives, already on their way home after early-morning shopping in Calabar, weighed down by heavy bags, and a fertile audience for the hypnotic patter of a salesman trading in some sort of tablets. As far as I could tell they were either slightly out-of-date vitamin pills or possibly aspirin, but if his act were to be believed, they were capable of curing anything from headaches to heart-disease. Business was brisk.

Otherwise the wait for my Cameroon visa was peacefully restful, with only occasional minor interruptions by local policeman eager to make a lucrative “arrest”. My passport duly bearing a systematically misspelt stamp (including of the words Cameroon and Calabar), and mindful of only a couple of days remaining on my seven-day Nigerian visa, I caught the ferry to Oron, whence boats to Cameroon allegedly departed. The alternative option was a bus. My guidebook mentioned a minimum seven official police checkpoints on the way to the border (implying an uncountable number of further unofficial checkpoints) – checking out the sea-route seemed an effort well worthwhile.

Oron was a smuggler town, and strangers were not welcome. Wandering the few yards down to the beach in search of the passport office, I came across various small boats being loaded. Their crews unequivocally proposed that I return to my hotel and remain in there until my boat departed next morning. A determined lady marched me up to the passport control, and then firmly suggested that I followed the crews’ advice for my own good.

The international boat to Cameroon proved to be a fifteen foot dinghy powered by a small outboard motor steered by a very short man balancing on the stern, three patched inner tubes for its dozen or so passengers being provided as its life-saving equipment. As we set off down the flat-calm of the river delta, it seemed slow but unthreatening. More alarming was the customs-control gunboat which swiftly detected us, demanded via siren and load-hailer that we halt immediately, and then boarded. A “duty” was payable… Happily this was the only such obstacle en route, which to me totally justified the choice of boat over bus.

After a few hours we came to a small island, a few thatched huts visible through tall grasses and mangroves. Rounding the cove, it became clear that it was not some rural island backwater, but rather the largest spirits warehouse in West Africa. I have only once seen more strong alcohol in a single location, and that was in Tesco’s national UK distribution centre. There were cases and cases of the stuff, mostly premium export branded whisky and brandy, but with a wide selection of alternatives, especially gin and pastis. Presumably it was the principle source of “duty-free” supplies to most of Nigeria. My fellow passengers fortified themselves at one of several bars, but I was relieved to see the boatman resisted this temptation.

A couple of hours later, many of the passengers were regretting their choices of aperitif as we left the twin shelters of the delta and island and entered the open Atlantic. The weather was still tranquil light rain with little wind, but the rollers were high enough to obscure the view of the coast, and we seemed to be quite far out to sea. I surreptitiously took possession of one of the inner tubes. I am no sailor and not at all knowledgeable about such matters, but a fifteen foot outboard open dinghy did not feel like the best option for an ocean voyage.
It was almost dark when thankfully we finally landed, apparently in the wrong place. A cheerful official met the boat and asked us if we had purchased tickets to Limbé (we had). This was Idenao, he explained, two hours back up the coast. The boatman would now refund us the difference in price. After a brief, sullen protest, the boatman did so. I had the impression it was a regular and ritualised transaction. The official’s smile broadened as he stamped our passports. “Nigerians are all thieves. Welcome to Cameroon”.

Nigeria - part 1

Of all the countries I have been (80+ and counting) Nigeria is the only one to which I never wish to return. Endowed with vast reserves of oil, it should be a moderately prosperous country despite its 170 million people, instead of which its highly urbanised population live in a poverty exacerbated by systematically relentless corruption.
My problems began at the frontier. I had been issued a visa valid for a month, but in a gesture of solidarity with his fellow officialdom, the border guard arbitrarily reduced this validity to a week – I could get an extension in a variety of ways, all of which involved significant contact with Nigerian bureaucracy. By the end of the day I had decided that under no circumstances would I spend more than a week there, despite an expected 2-3 day delay while I obtained a visa for the next country Cameroon.
The driver had come prepared with a pile of small denomination Naira notes in the glove compartment of the car. Beyond the border stretched a broad dual carriageway along which heavy lorries and buses thundered, an abrupt transition from sleepy Benin, but every few kilometres the traffic was slowed to walking pace by a police checkpoint, marked by a plank hammered full of upturned nails to choke the traffic down to single file. At each one, the driver placed a note in the palm of his hand, shook hands carefully with the armed policeman, and the Naira mysteriously vanished. In this way we made reasonable speed.

Occasionally it seemed he misjudged the appropriate sum, and we were summoned out of the car. Generally the driver handled these situations with diplomatic astuteness (usually by dispensing another small amount of cash), but on a couple of occasions something went more seriously wrong. On the first, we were marched into the police station, where my luggage was searched and, on discovering my camera, I was loudly accused of being a spy. (They also discovered my lucky owl, a small stuffed toy presented to me by my parents before a previous journey in South America to keep me safe. John le Carré makes no mention of lucky owls in any of his novels). This was rather alarming but my driver muttered in French to be quiet, and then proceeded in the local language to establish that the “fine” for spying would be twenty dollars, swiftly negotiated down to ten. As Nigeria also sported one of the dreaded currency declaration forms, which the police had neglected so far to check and thereby discover I was still carrying a significant quantity of cash, I quickly agreed pending any higher demand. The second occasion was more disturbing, as we were marched at gunpoint into a small room, I was again accused of being a spy, and we were then left to stew for half an hour, before the policeman returned still gesticulating dangerously with his gun. I was by now quite frightened, but bizarrely the (apparently) standard twenty dollar fine was demanded, once again reduced to ten after discussions which still involved waving the gun around and periodically pointing it at me. Thankfully after passing around Lagos, which I had decided to avoid as its evil reputation suggested that as a lone traveller I would be excessively vulnerable to, at the very least, sudden separation from my rucksack, the checkpoints settled down again to the routine handshake process.
"Señor Optime": a small owl arrested for spying 

Next morning I stood outside my hotel, recovering from a cold shower (I hate cold showers even in the hottest stickiest climates, but there was inevitably no hot water) and trying to figure out from a wholly inadequate map which part of town I was in. A fellow guest introduced himself: he was a professional footballer playing for a team in Sweden home to visit his family during the summer break, and could he help? I explained that I was trying to figure out where buses departed to Calabar, a town in the Niger Delta area whose main attraction was the alternative Cameroonian consulate not in Lagos.
He very generously offered to drive me to the minibus station, helped find me a seat, and then passed the time waiting for the bus to fill up by showing me squad photos. Twenty years on, I can’t remember either his name or the team, so if you happen to be a Nigerian footballer from Ibadan playing in Sweden during the 1990-1 season reading this, then thank you for your help!
I was allocated a rearward facing seat, my back to the driver. My neighbour, in the centre seat, was a man in his late twenties, clean shaven and dressed in a dark suit and tie. No sooner had the bus started than he extracted a bible which he studied deeply, occasionally underlining passages, making small grunts of agreement as he did so. After a couple of hours, it became apparent that he had not selected his seat at random, and that his bible study was preparation for the religious service he now proceeded to conduct. Some stirring revivalist preaching went down quite well with the rest of the passengers, who chorused “praise the Lord” and “amen” appropriately in a rather subdued manner, but what really got them into the spirit were the hymns. Most were sung in English and everybody joined in enthusiastically, but we were travelling from Yoruba to Igbo areas, and the preacher occasionally successfully suggested a hymn in one or the other of these languages. Once he asked if anyone knew any Hausa hymns (the Hausa are the dominant group in northern Nigeria, and are almost exclusively Moslems), which raised a laugh but no tunes. It was almost cliché Africa, as the hymns were well chosen, and the passengers clearly knew them all well enough to sing parts in harmonies, with a bass voice at the back making an especially beautiful contribution.  I am not a religious person, but the whole experience was quite moving, and to these people the message of Christianity clearly had meaning to them in a deep way: if you live in Nigeria, then the next life can only be better than this one.