Philippines

All posts tagged Philippines

In true Global Nomad style, friend Mads, who is currently spending 9 months travelling around Latin America, managed to show up in Antigua the same week I was there, so we took a little time to wander round the town with our cameras.  Random meandering brought us through the local market and to the bus depot. While hardly a premier tourist destination in itself (save for those entering and exiting the town via public bus), the combination of dark skies, shoddy foreground, and bright colours on the bodies of the buses themselves, all made for a creative and alternative photographic diversion.

It’s fun to see how buses get treated in different parts of the world.  Highly functional in the west, in poorer countries they are a capital investment of the highest order for middle-sized businessmen, and can be highly lucrative once a service and line can be well established.  They are both a source of blessing (income), and a magnet for all kinds of superstition and fear given their propensity to crash in many of these places, with high fatality rates associated.

My first real exposure to the world of colourful buses was in Nairobi in 2001.  Their minibuses are called ’Matatus’ (a derivative of the kiswahili word for ‘three’- ‘tatu’- after the original cost of a fare, three shillings. Tatu itself has its roots in the Arabic word for three, ‘thalaatha’, Kiswahili being a trade language derived from a mix of Arabic and the traditional Bantu group of languages spoken along the east African coastline).  Matatus were a gloriously offensive expression of Kenyan street culture- painted in gaudy hues, airbrushed densely enough that the chassis could rust away and the thing would still hold together, and with a sound-system that ensured you didn’t just hear the Matatus coming, you actually felt them.

As in most places in the developing world, the fact that the Matatus were primarily Nissan and Toyota minivans didn’t stop their conductors cramming sixteen or eighteen people inside as a matter of course- four to a row, hips jammed together in the dense, sweaty interior, produce and babies and all, while the subwoofer vibrated your ribcage with an intensity that could pop a chicken’s skull.  Competition for routes was severe- at times leading to violent confrontation- and negotiating the roads near a bus-stop was always a gauntlet to run.  Driving was horrendous, however.  The drivers were ramped on miraa (the local variant of the herbal chew khat, that comes over by the truckload from Somalia), helping them stay awake despite fatigue, and creating a false sense of invincibility that would have them overtaking at high speed on blind corners, with routinely predictable results.

With soaring fatalities, the new Kenyan government under Kibaki pushed through a set of gutsy reforms a few years after I was there, forcing the industry to be regulated.  Routes were formalized, paint-jobs were replaced with a ubiquitous yellow stripe, sound-systems were limited to certain decibels, and speed-governors were installed on motors.  This was, ultimately, a good thing, as the number of lives lost to reckless driving fell substantially.  However I have to say that in my opinion, a little of the soul of Nairobi was also stripped away in the process, and in a city that needs all the help it can get to present a positive face, I felt it lost a little.

Kenya’s not alone in the colourful bus stakes however.  Juddering through Colombo’s steamy streets during last year’s monsoon in two-stroke tuk-tuks, I can vividly recall the searing stench of diesel exhaust from the oversized, windowless Lanka Ashok Leyland buses, with hyper-real murals airbrushed front, back and sides.  Sitting in the passenger seat of the rickshaw, my head would barely reach the top of the rear tyre of the beasts while the enourmous engine rattled behind its panels just inches from my ear in the claustrophobic rush-hour.  Peering up at rows of resigned brown faces peering back down at me, I occasionally wondered whether the driver even knew we were down there, worrying at what was keeping us from being turned into a thin slick sheet of crushed aluminium.

For an altogether different approach to public buses, the Jeepneys of the Philippines are hard to go past.  Like the bastard child of a 1940s army jeep and a decrepit stretched limo, these ply the streets of Manila in airbrushed hordes.  Images of Hollywood starlets, soaring eagles, or religious montages cry out for attention off the sides of the awkward vehicles, rows of people crammed inside in the dense heat.  The windowless sides provide what little circulation can be created in the crawling metropolis traffic, a mixed blessing in air so polluted you can pretty much see it.

Almost certainly my favourite to look at, however, are the trucks and, specifically, buses of Pakistan.  Taking frivolous decoration to new heights of sheer gaudiness, the transports are wrapped in fabrics, mirrors, tassles and shiny things in all manner of colours and styles.  Fringes hang from windshields until they seem to obscure the view.  Swirling hues scream from the chassis to be noticed.  Airhorns, seeming ripped from oil supertankers, announce the arrival and imminent departure of services.  Loud Sindhi music blares from speakers while Urdu variants of Bollywood cinema flashes across a tiny television screen mounted at the front of the aisle.  They are truly marvellous creatures to watch coming down the road- and if I ever make it back to Pakistan with my camera I’ll do my best to capture some.

For now, however, this series of photos are all from the jaunt through the Antigua bus depot, and I’ll have to leave your imagination to fill in the images that I can only suggest with words.  But I thoroughly enjoyed this shoot, and a chance to explore a little of another nation’s culture, as expressed through the medium of public transport.

*So this clearly isn’t a bus.  But it kind of fit into the vehicular category I’ve been exploring.  And I liked the angle and curves on this old VW Beetle that was parked at an Antigua roadside.  The Spanish word for car, ‘coche’ is actually from the same place we get for the English ‘coach’, synonymous with bus, so it kind of works.  A hark back to the day when the word ‘coach’ refered to a range of horse-drawn carriages which early automobiles mirrored in form and function.

**Mads in Antigua, with a colourful fairground stall as a backdrop.  The fairground backed right onto the bus depot (see the ferris wheel in one of the earlier shots above) and was colourful and in use, but very run down.

The Theory

1. Analyse the needs of people affected by disaster

2. Write program designs to guide activities and get funding

3. Carry out relief response activities

 

The Field Reality

1. Carry out disaster relief response activities

2. Write program designs to guide activities and get funding

3. Analyse the needs of people affected

*sigh*

It’s still raining in Manila.  It’s been raining consistently and lightly for the last eighteen hours, but nothing to get excited about.  I imagine the water-levels in some of the flooded areas are going up again, but people are prepared for worse so they should be okay.

As of a couple of hours ago, Typhoon Parma made landfall up north, but if the forecasts and satellite images are to be believed, it’s substantially weakened and really just skipping off the very corner of Luzon, about 400km north of here.  It’s now listed as a Category II storm and we’re all still waiting to see what happens, but feeling a lot more hopeful today than we did last night.  With luck we’ve dodged this bullet and the system will skip back out into the Pacific and dissapate.  Thoughts remain with those up in Aurora district right now, where they’ll be feeling the impact of the winds and rain, but we probably won’t hear much news before tomorrow.  Meanwhile, the teams have resumed relief operations here in Manila, still trying to respond to the half-million people who’ve been displaced from their homes from all the flooding last week.  Business as usual, as they say.

It’s raining in Manila. It’s a warm, drippy sort of shower that falls straight from a grey sky onto the tarmac with a gentle pattering sound that is all but swallowed by the rumble of traffic, the honking of horns and the incessant blowing of whistles by traffic police and parking attendants as they attempt to control the morass of vehicles choking in the damp avenues. Palm fronds hang limp in the still tropical air, weighed down by the smell of exhaust fumes, warm asphalt and wafts from open sewers. Or perhaps it’s the tension.

Five days after Manila suffered its worst flooding in three decades, the city is holding its breath again. Typhoon Parma, hot on the heels of its predecessor Ketsana, rolls ashore tonight. We’re not sure where it’s going, only that it’s on its way. A Category 4 ‘Super-Typhoon’, the prognosis isn’t great. It’s still intensifying, and will continue to do so until it makes landfall somewhere along the north-eastern coast of the Philippines, most likely somewhere north of the capital. It’s expected to pack wind-gusts in excess of 230kph (140mph). It’s also due to slow right down. Which is bad news. When a storm slows down, it has longer to dump the rain held in the saturated air caught up in the vortex of its system. Ketsana dumped more than 40cm (16 inches) in 9 hours- a month’s rainfall in one go, and Parma is set to deposit anywhere upwards of 25cm (8 inches). The mountainous terrain of northern Luzon is already saturated and can’t hold much water, and the steep mountain slopes are primed to slide. Large landslides are a perpetual hazard to the archipelago.

The parking lot in the office compound here has been the site of frenetic activity all day today, as dozens of young volunteers continue to prepare food packs and emergency kits for families already displaced by Typhoon Ketsana. It’s Friday night here, but none of us are expecting a quiet weekend. It is still possible that the storm will swing north and only strike Luzon a glancing blow, and for the sake of the people here we pray it will go that way. But already the storm has tracked further south than predicted, and there are reports that some of the outlying islands are already being battered by the storm. It’s due to hit around midnight tonight, in about eight hours, and then stick around for a further 24. If the highways and phone lines are cut, it may take days before we know exactly what happens. All we can do for now is place our teams on standby, and hope for the best.

I realise that my blog has been a bit one-dimensional these past few weeks, a reflection in part of a slow couple of months in the office without much to talk about, and different priorities during my free time that have meant I haven’t spent as much time maintaining the site as I sometimes do. All part of the journey.

I found out yesterday afternoon that tomorrow morning I’ll be deploying to Manila to help with our office’s response to the flooding caused by Cyclone Ketsana that hit over the weekend. I’ll be out there for an initial couple of weeks, and see what happens from there.

As always with our line of work, when it rains, it pours. As well as trouncing Manila, Ketsana went on and as of last night had hit the Vietnamese coastline as a Category I typhoon. We’re still waiting to see the extent of the damage, and have teams on standby to help there as well. Three more tropical storm systems, two already named, are still queued up in the northern Pacific and tracking towards the east Asian coastline. Additionally, last night a shallow magnitude 8.0 earthquake struck Samoa, resulting in a small (5-foot) tsunami that has swamped villages and so far claimed at least 14 lives. And in Guinea, heavy-handed forces allied to a military government that seized power in a coup last year have been violently quelling protests with live rounds, resulting in over 150 deaths and 1,200 injuries. Guinea is in a state of growing instability and observers will be watching closely to see what unfolds over the coming weeks.

All this, of course, in addition to the usual humanitarian fare of forgotten crises that plod on with minimal support or international concern: ongoing warfare in southern Somalia, massive displacement in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Darfur, continued rebuilding amidst the instability of north-west Pakistan, the detention of 250,000 civilians in camps in northern Sri Lanka, simmering tribal warfare in Southern Sudan, not to mention northern Uganda, Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, and the three thousand people who will die from HIV/AIDS today. To name a few.

I’ll try and keep you updated with thoughts, experiences and images while I’m on the road. Hopefully I won’t face quite so many restrictions this time around.