Apologies for the long silence; here is my excuse and also a vignette of Yemeni life. I can only get internet in my apartment when city power is working in Sana'a, and lately city power has mostly been a memory. This is due to the enterprising tactics of the tribes in Marib, east of Sana'a, who are spending all of their spare time blowing up pylons and power lines. They hope that sufficient disruption of the lives of people in the capital will lead to their demands being met, which are many and varied. Lately they have even been shooting the repair men, which is why being an electrical engineer here is a profession only for a daredevil.
I had a pleasant two days in Aden, capital of the South. The British spent a few years in the 60s finding it a useful place to fill their boats up with 4 star unleaded on the way to India, but eventually got sick of the restless natives and left them to it. There is still a statue of Queen Victoria in Victoria Park, and a chip van that hasn't moved in the last 50 years. There are some nice beaches in Aden, where you can be titillated by the sight of a lady's ankle as her abaya flaps up when she dives into the sea.
Aden Bay, or is that Aden Bay in the background? |
Who do I have to kill to get a game there?
A lot of the Southerners are up for a return for an independent South, and they hold a thing called "civil disobedience" every Wednesday, which is quite touching. This is basically a load of students who put up roadblocks in really inconvenient places, and they probably refuse to tidy their rooms as well.
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Showing some respect in Victoria Park |
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