With all of my organised holiday trips from April onwards cancelled (well, postponed until next year), I decided that I should try to persuade one tour comany to retain a small part of one trip - just an optional add-on for maximum three people, for a two-day trip, that I thought might be feasible - and I succeeded. So I have just returned from an entirely illogical trip that involved three and a half days of quite expensive travel for just one and a half days of actual holiday - but am enormously happy to have done so as the psychological boost of going away, and to somewhere new, has been huge.
So where have I been?Somalia - to Mogadishu!
Not your run-of-the-mill destination, but a really interesting one and it being somewhere that nobody I know has visited somehow made it feel more of a major trip.
I was surprised to see no evidence of any Chinese interest there (must be the only country in Africa where they don't appear to have a presence!), but it was interesting to see the other influences, both historic and new. This ranged from the Italian influence on the cuisine (cappuccinos and lattes, pasta dishes, and superb ice cream), the more prosaic legacy of the UK (from the three-square-pin power sockets to the "UK aid" sign showing that the fish market was constructed with money "from the British people") to the growing Turkish interest in the country (including an enormous, and beautiful, Turkish mosque recently built in the green zone).
Also very interesting was the extent to which the country has taken to mobile (digital) money, so much so that the country is now almost cashless. It was almost impossible to get change from any purchases we made, and took a great deal of persistence to eventually get myself a Somalian banknote as a souvenir (the largest denomination - 1,000 Somalian shillings - worth 4 US cents on the black market and with a 98% chance of being counterfeit although that doesn't stop people using them as that is all they have). I was suprised that even the beggars there use mobile money, holding up signs providing their number should you want to send a digital donation their way.
At the end of the trip, our hotel screwed up and failed to provide our airport transfer at the scheduled time, so by the time we got to the airport we were too late for our flight. We were provided with another night at the hotel, and meals, but as the guide and armed guards were not available we were not able to go out of the hotel. I have to admit I was quite tempted, as the hotel is in the green zone with multiple checkpoints all around it supposedly keeping it safe, but I followed the instructions and stayed inside, sorting out and uploading my photos. I realised that I had made the right decision when late in the afternoon I heard several rounds of gunfire from just a couple of blocks away, followed by a circling helicopter and plenty of shouting in the streets; even looking out from my small balcony seemed too dangerous at that stage.
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