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A Day in the Life
Shaneel Pathak
September
2002
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I
flew in to Moresby and it was not long before I realized
how different it is from the rest of PNG. You have your
shopping malls, restaurants, proper roads and bus system.
Its quite modern. It also has your share of crime.
All buildings and houses have fences with razor wire; metal
gates and bars on windows and doors. Expats have HF
radios so you are always in contact with a Security agency
while driving.
Its
common to hear random gunfire at night, armed robberies
happen during the day so do car jacking at gunpoint. (It
happened to our neighbour ½ hour before we arrived).
This
is a first for me being in the most unsafe capital
cities of the world. The UN survey came out the day I arrived.
Port Moresby was dead last at 130 beating Johannesburg
and of all places Kabul, Afghanistan!
In saying
this, I must add the people here are very friendly, like
the rest of PNG. One problem is the large influx of people
from all parts of PNG in search of jobs. With the economy
weak, they turn to rascal gangs. Add the tribal
nature of PNG; the clans have their own turf, causing heated
battles. Ex-pats are caught in the middle and are fair game.
This
is different from most cities in PNG, as ex-pats are left
alone while clans battle it out. (I am not being sarcastic,
tribal warfare is still going on in parts of PNG).
The
crime didnt deter me from going out in the evenings.
I probably ate at every Asian restaurant in town and had
my share of homemade curry; there is only so much of canned
tuna you can take.
The
two weeks of Moresby was enough to appreciate the safe cities
of Canada.
At the
WWF office, I met the regional director for the South Pacific
program, the country manager and the local staff. I gave
a talk on best practices for computer management, expanded
their computer network and rebuilt a few machines. The main
objective was to have all computers and printers on the
network. Even though the office had 15 people they had 2
scanners, 3 CD-burners and 5 printers! After showing them
the benefit of shared resources on a network, I convinced
them to distribute the extra equipment to other project
offices.
Two
days before returning to Wewak, I heard an earthquake hit
the town. Damage was not bad, but some power lines were
cut, more importantly the water mains to the city were broken.
It took two weeks to restore the water, and I must admit
having no water is probably the hardest thing to live without.
When you here that millions of people dont have clean
water I realize now how it feels.
Shops
and businesses closed at 3pm during the water crises. This
allowed people to head to the depots where fire trucks would
dispense river water. My ration was half an ice cooler/day.
(You dont realize how heavy water is until you have
to lift it!). You loose motivation to cook as you dont
have water to do dishes, and toilet use has to be rationed.
Thankfully
there was no outbreak of disease or civil unrest. For a
7.9 earthquake casualties were very low. It was impressive
to see local businesses and government services set up an
emergency response team and water and health services dispatched
promptly.
Luckily
water was restored prior to the Dutch Embassys inspection
of the WWF Sepik Land Care project. Another adventure which
will come in my next journal!
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