Freitag, 11. Januar 2008

From Port Sudan to Gedaref



The troubles with the police did not end yet: when i wanted to visit kassala on wednesday, the cops at the checkpoint at the outskirts of the city forced me to change the bus to go to gedaref. the problem was again the travel permit. i felt ashamed for the tears i was crying because of this ridiculous problem (i still have plenty of time to come back to kassala), compared to those of the poor people here, but my helplessness towards the police tied me into knots. i planned to go to gedaref later,as it's on the way to gonder (ethiopia) but kassala is much more beautiful, laying on the slope of a very impressive mountain. i hope i can get the permit for kassala tomorrow, after the office was closed on the weekend.

so far i don't have any further exciting stories to tell. i'm very disappointed how things went wrong and i wasted most of my time here in sudan, but on the other hand i'm looking forward to enter ethiopia next week. the permitterror will be over and i'll find endless mountain ranges to discover.

Dienstag, 8. Januar 2008

No expulsion, I can continue travelling

finally after 5 days of investigations the national security office received the order from khartoum to let me continue to travel in sudan freely. i don't know if this order is a result of interventions by austrian diplomats, but i think, if the suspicions by the police were really serious, they had already put me in jail.the only restriction i'm facing now is that i'm not allowed to trek in the mountains anymore. so i'll leave port sudan, heading to ethiopia through kassala and gedaref within about one week. there i'll find more freedom to travel as i've already found out 1 year ago.

i'm quite upset that my story and the blog were published everywhere in the austrian media. i didn't intend to become famous this way, but it's me who put me in this bad situation. i've travelled to many countries before, but i still have to learn a lot, especially about the "not to do's" in police states like sudan.

the last days were mentally very hard for me as i was not sure about the results and consequences of the investigations. to be convicted of spying in sudan for sure leads to a long-term imprisonment. but i have to mention that the police treated me well and was very friendly (there's nobody sitting behind me forcing me to write this), except for forbidding me phonecalls and later also to use the internet.

for all journalists, embassy officials, etc. : you can use this blog entry as a basis for further reports, but i'm not ready for any interview. my problem is solved now and everything about it is written in this blog. i think there are thousands of other austrians travelling around the world with much more exciting stories. thanks for all diplomats who tried to help me, i'm sorry for not answering the mails, but i was not allowed to.

Samstag, 5. Januar 2008

under supervision of sudanese police

well, the postcards didn't cause any troubles, but the articles about the former rebel groups definetly did. it was just soooooooo stupid to carry them in my luggage. they interrogated me for a few hours and they believe that i'm either a journalist or a spy.

currently the investigations are still running, but they told me that i'll most likely be expelled from sudan, the question is just: to ethiopia or to austria?

in the mean time (since 2 days) i can only move around in port sudan, always accompanied by a guy from the National Security Office. i'm not allowed to call anyone, but at least they let me surf and don't control the websites i'm visiting (probably they do afterwards).i hope that the remaining progress will be finished soon and i can move freely again.

the irony of my situation is that just untill to 2 months ago i worked for an organization assisting illegal foreigners in austria to return to their home country. now i can have a very authentic view from the reverse side, with the difference that there'll be no NGO supporting me. the austrian embassy here has very few influence.

Mittwoch, 2. Januar 2008

Trekkingtour in Red Sea Hills (Sudan)

Red Sea Hills

my apprehension became true: after a 6 days trek the police arrested me in a small village in the middle of nowhere. they didn't suspect me of anything, but somehow my permit was not valid for this area and they sent me back to port sudan.

the tour itself was great, with very diversified landscape: i started in erkowit, a village inside surprisingly green landscape on the edge of a big plateau. the hills looked like bunches of rocks that were just now thrown on the floor, without any erosion of wind and water. i stayed there one day to recover from some fever and diarroe. the weather there was quite cold and windy, sometimes even with tiny raindrops though the rainy season is in summer. then i met the typical red-brown eroded mountains with vegetation only on the bottom of the valleys like i knew it from earlier trips like sinai and ethiopia. after that i crossed a flat desert, fighting with sandstorms for a whole day to reach again the escarpment of the plateau to descent to the village where my tour ended forcefully.

but maybe the police even saved my life as they later told me in port sudan that there are landmines on the route where i wanted to continue. on the other hand the local people (who have to know about it better) didn't know about the mines so i think they only searched for a reason why i should be thankful to them, and not as angry as i appeared to them.

the landmines are the remains of a civil war in this region that ended with a peace agreement in october last year. the local ethnics, beja and rashaida, similar to darfur, felt marginalized and couldn't participate in the national politics, before the agreement. like in somalia, ethiopia and maybe other countries virtually all rebel groups in sudan are sponsored by the eritrean government. in port sudan i could met some leaders of the beja faction of the rebel group. they told me that they are very disappointed by the agreement, because most of the new government posts granted to them were occupied by the asmara-part of the group, which is rather interested in better relations between eritrea and sudan than the development of red sea region. the region is blessed with a lot of mineral resources like gold and uran and the most important oil pipeline from the oil fields in the south to the sea ports is crossing it, but the local people haven't seen any benefits from it.

the beja, who inhabit the area where i trekked are said to be very hostile towards foreigners, something i could not confirm. they were very friendly and rather worried about me and tried to convince me that it is too dangerous to go there alone. when their arguements came to an end they told me about lions living here, but i knew that the area is lion-free. sometimes i had communication problems because some of them speak only a few words arabic. most of them are raising goats, in the lowlands also camels.

today i had to apply again for a travel permit for another area close to port sudan. this time, they also checked and searched all the stuff of my bag. they confiscated stuff that were suspicious to them: some articles about the rebel groups (i can understand this) and some postcards from austria (!) that i use as gifts for the people i meet along the way. they said they'll investigate it and later , after my 2nd trekking tour will give it back to me. i'm anxious to the investigation's result.