|
Ole Samurai prepares to be lodgings for the night |
“Are you going to leave at four or five?” asked the man with the
gun and the Security Group hoodie.
I was lost for a bit there because all I had
asked him was where I could find some reasonably priced accommodation in the
neighbourhood of the petrol station he was guarding. “You just give me a
thousand,” he added.
“Uganda
shillings?” I asked, finally catching his drift.
“Yes, U
shillings,” he confirmed with a self-satisfied grin. “You won’t be alone, see?”
he went on and, pointing with the barrel of his gun at three cars, four matatus (communal taxis) and a luxury
Toyota mini van. “There are people in those cars and they will continue to
Kampala early tomorrow morning_____”
“And of course we
will be safe because you have a gun?” I asked, interrupting his pitch; why let
the man continue preaching to the deaconry, right? “Here is two thousand,” I added
to his delightful surprise, “one for your hospitality, the other for the idea.”
He beamed at me.
|
very thoughtfully, in case you need to freshen up ..... |
“And if you wish to freshen up before you
sleep,” he said most hospitably, while leading me to where there was a
long-snouted plastic container and basin, “you just come here.”
As promised
by the askari with a gun, Ole Samurai and I spent a peaceful and rather
uneventful night together (one inside the other, to be precise) at the Bugiri
Petrol Station on the Malaba Kampala Highway.
The
discovery early in the morning that there was a running tap under the water
tank and even better, a working bathroom next to the tank, was purely
accidental, but a welcome bonus.
My Ugandan
friend in Kampala however didn’t seem impressed.
“It’s legal nowadays,” he said nonchalantly
when I explained how I’d never waste money on hotel rooms again. “They changed
the law just the other day to allow travellers to sleep in their cars. Otherwise
you would have been arrested for jaywalking.”
Jaywalking indeed!
As if they would give a hoot! Except in the
city of Kampala where my most organised always-travel-with-a-map brother
Muthomi was once delayed for almost an hour for carrying an expired driving
licence, the policemen of Uganda are
generally very well disposed towards people with Kenyan plates on their cars.
“Habari my friend,” said the first ever Ugandan
highway patrolman to wave me down. ”How is Kenya?” he shouted as he hurried to catch
up and come to my window.
“Kenya is good.”
“Wapi
chai yangu?” (Where is my tea?).
Just like that, without even looking at my
cracked windscreen, or scrutinising my then expired driver’s licence and
insurance! The total lack of shame with which he uttered this last statement, despite
the fact that tea is the oldest euphemism for a bribe in Kenya, is the true
definition of impunity. So with a smile that said “no offense, officer but you’re being silly,” I let him have it.
“Did
someone inform you I was bringing it?”
“These
crazy Kenyans!” he exclaimed to no one in particular. He waved his hands wildly
in the air in dismay at our craziness. “Have a safe journey,” he added as he
waved me on, with a look almost of pity in his eyes.
Henceforth, I have adopted the retort “did
someone say I was bringing it?” as standard response to anyone who asks me for
“my tea.” Try it some time, but not on a Kenyan traffic policeman. The fines,
both legal and illegal, can be too steep for that kind of talk – especially with
the tough new laws.
But this is not about the Kenyan police. It the
story of how I spent a restful night at Bugiri petrol Station during one
uneventful journey through Uganda. On this trip, friends and neighbours, I was
also to find out that Rwandan plates driving through Uganda do not command the
same respect as Kenyan plates do. This may explain why, on reaching Kampala the
next morning, I had to part with Ushs. 20,000 (Ksh 800) for making a simple S
turn. (What? Never heard of an S turn? It’s when you make an illegal U turn,
realise your mistake and make another to correct the first one.)
The male and female cop that caught me were
friendly though, and made small talk about Paul Kagame and how he had fallen
out with M7 for a long time until their wives orchestrated reconciliation. And
after the cash had disappeared into their dark trench coats, they even wanted
my phone number so we could keep in touch. I lied of course; gave them the
wrong number by two digits!
Nothing amusing though about the next
bunch of Ugandan cops that stopped me later that day. Having taken some time to
have the old junk’s suspension checked, I had left Kampala at around seven pm
and hoped to do at least four hours of the nine hour journey before finding a
friendly petrol station to pitch camp at for the night. It happened on a rough
stretch of road less than three hours after leaving the city.
It was a bit confusing and rather scary, not
just because the “policemen,” just materialised out of the bushes and had no actual
uniforms to speak of safe for worn out army issue jungle jackets, but because
they were armed with only a torch with a watery weak beam and were not beneath
pleading, nay, begging, for at least USh 2,000 (Ksh. 60)
“Ati
leasti,” said one, meaning “at least” and playing the torch on the back seat
of the jeep,”2000 will help us purchesi
the batteries for thisi torchi. Iti
is for your safety, ssebo.” He moved around to inspect my meagre cargo better.
“Nobody cares abouti us out here,” he
added getting back to my window.
Something, I realised, was not quite right.
But it didn’t hit me until just when I was handing
over my USh 1000 donation for their Police Torch Fund. It was only then that I
took off as fast as my 20 year old jeep could.
It was their furtive gestures, darting eye
movements, faltering English and confidence levels that tended to rise and fall
as we haggled that had set my hairs aflutter and set alarm bells in my head.
Moments later, my intuition was proven right when out of the bushes came two big
motorbikes with bad engines. They gave chase for about a kilometre then fell
back.
“.... many highway robbers on that section of
road,” said the armed guard at the next petrol station when I narrated my
experience as I handed over my last 1000 U shillings for the overnight truck
stop.
As I settled for another uneventful night’s
sleep, I couldn’t help feeling very lucky. Even luckier that the next day I
would be in Kigali , Rwanda, kwa Paul Kagame, where a man can go unmolested anywhere, any time of day or
night, and cops don’t ask for Chai for
fear of dismissal and jail.
© Lloyd
Igane; Nairobi 2012
kreative@earthling.net