Sunday, November 29, 2009
Ole Bess declared Roadworthy
Soooooo, Reid returned the next day to NaTIS, after first spending the morning at Minz Garage. Minz, by the way, found nothing out of the ordinary with Ole Bess, but cleaned her up well and wrote out a ticket indicating he had traced the leak. This satisfied the “inspectors” and Ole Bess was declared Roadworthy. Reid was issued the proper documentation and tried to hurriedly make it back to our last session of baseball at WIS. Because he was in such a hurry, he didn’t notice that the one piece of computerized documentation in this whole process was replete with errors. The woman has the thing listed as using petrol/gas when it clearly does not (she's a diesel)---- among other mistakes. Ah Africa! The photo above is of the number of official stamps of the kingdom that we had to collect. We’ll then hand all of this over to the buyer and he’ll have to go about collecting the stamps, signatures and documents that he needs and of course pay the all important fees at each step in turn.
NaTIS, by the way has its own website where one purportedly can download the correct forms and access all the info one needs to know when embarking on this grand adventure. Of course, when one clicks on the links, nothing comes up because it’s still all under construction!
http://www.ra.org.na/VehicleRegistrationAndLicensing.html
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
How to sell a car in Namibia in three easy steps—yeah right!
Selling our vehicle has been an interesting exercise into the inner workings of African bureaucracy. Of course no part of this process is computerized and so one must advance through the steps collecting the all important “official stamp” of the kingdom without which one had better not present himself at the next level. I'd never thought I would come to view American bureaucratic systems as being efficient (at least some of them especially regarding car sales), but this experience has permanently altered my perceptions.
We knew a bit about the process prior to embarking upon this adventure from having purchased the vehicle from an individual in the first place. We knew that a police clearance of the vehicle was the first hoop through which we had to jump. We didn’t know though that the clearance in and of itself consisted of several steps very little of which is explained or indicated by signage or handout or verbal cue. We located the correct building down on Banhof and Independence, parked our vehicle and presented ourselves at several windows to determine what needed to be done. It was basically those who were waiting in line, essentially the customers, who explained the process to us. No one person of course could explain all of the details, so we put it together piecemeal from each of the individuals we encountered along the way. At PHASE ONE, we waited in the vehicle until we could pull into the parking bay. Once parked, we propped the hood like everyone else, we were told we needed to complete a form. The guy with the forms, however was nowhere to be found. Once he did show, and once the form was completed, no one even bothered to look under the hood. The papers were then submitted to some women who sat behind what looked to be end tables in the alcove of the stairwell leading up to the second floor. They stamped the registration form with great enthusiasm. They then indicated that we should wait a few days before proceeding to PHASE TWO of the process.
The following Monday, we presented ourselves at the entrance marked PHASE TWO. Here there were at least posted notices telling the clientele to first go to Office One. Of course, the woman who inhabits Office One was not present. So, we took a seat and waited and waited. Several customers asked if someone would be coming to assist us and were told, “She is coming just now.” Finally, a woman arrived with a liter bottle of a name brand soft drink in tow and entered the office. Reid went in armed with copies of the registration, copies of his passport, his international driver’s license, etc. Our little stack of paperwork had become quite thick. She matched up the names and numbers with the documents, wrote a few things into a notebook and stamped, stamped, stamped.
It was on to Office Two which fortunately was adjacent. Several women inhabited this office and gave us essentially the evil eye when we arrived with our stack of documents. There was not one single object of technology in sight. They too were recording everything by hand in their little notebooks filled with forms and carbon paper. We received a couple of stamps from Dame #1 and a few more stamps from Dame#2 after paying the appropriate fee. When they deduced we were foreigners from the “duh” nature of all of questions, they did drop their air of being put upon and projected a somewhat more friendly attitude, but only somewhat and we ascertained that we needed to go up to the NaTiS (Roads Authority) Bureau in a different section of town to complete the Road Worthiness portion of the process.
Armed with all of our documentation replete with the appropriate stamps, we headed for NaTiS in the Northern Industrial sector of Windhoek. NaTiS is billed as your one-stop transit authority where you can meet all of your transit needs. We now needed to complete the Roadworthiness test to make sure the vehicle is fit for the road. We arrived about 8:10 in the morning, but that was actually a bit late. We should have gotten in line in the wee hours, sort of like waiting for rock concert tickets to go on sale, so that we’d have been up there in the queue. As it was, we were clueless as to which queue we needed to line up in. The guides directing us spoke little to no English, they grabbed one of the clients who translated. We were in the wrong queue. Additionally, another form needed to be procured and completed. We headed for the right queue behind a retaining wall. To our surprise, the wall was hiding a mass of cars equivalent to a 50 meter section of Los Angeles freeway traffic during the rush hour standstill. It was already 35 degrees Celsius and no cars were advancing.
Reid went to retrieve the correct form. He returned to our car to fill it out and then headed back to the “office” to pay the fee. He returned yet again, but without the form, just the receipt for payment. Everyone around us though seemed to have the form in hand. What to do? Absolutely no signage even hinting at the process. A couple of guys wearing uniform shirts with the logo of some local car dealerships stood ahead of us in line, surely they’d know what to do. Indeed, one kind young gentleman named Vernon took us in hand and ran our document down for us. He then proceeded to explain the process in intricate detail. It appears he does this everyday for a living for the car dealership where he works. Bless him! He even filled out some of the missing info on the form for us.
The inspection process, and that’s all the Road Worthiness test essentially is, took place in three steps. After several hours of waiting and advancing in tiny increments, we finally encountered the first “inspector” who checked out that the signals, lights, wheels, engine and doors were in order. This took maybe 45 seconds in total. The freeway of cars then narrowed down to one lane so that they could straddle the pit and have the undercarriage looked at, step two. It was a mad jostling to position the cars (if cars can jostle each other) in the one queue. Once the cars had been run through the pit, they were parked in the area to await someone to drive them round to their waiting owners at the gate, hence the completion of step three. Just as we approached the pit, we were stopped to wait for the inspectors to clear out the waiting cars. That took another 45 minutes or so as the hot, hot Namibian sun climbed higher in the sky.
When we did get our car over the pit, the inspector indicated that we had a bit of an oil leak that needed repair. We then had to park the car and wait yet again until the lot was cleared. The young lady who drove our car around tore off the bottom of the form and handed it back to us so that when we returned, they’d be able to locate the original form to which the stub had been attached and we’d not have to go through the entire process again. She put the form in a drawer of one of those plastic stacker organizers. Nothing was entered into a computer, so we hope that they will still have the documentation when we return. We won’t be holding our breath on that one.
Soooooooooo, Reid’s going to the mechanic today who will hopefully be able to correct the leak in a timely enough fashion for Reid to report back to NaTiS to complete the retest. Retests are only performed from 8-9 a.m. and 1-2 p.m. Ahhh Africa!
We’re trying to maintain a sense of humor about all of this, but sometimes it’s just not funny. My neighbor who is of Afrikaaner origin says one day, she’s going to get tired of laughing and have to move out of Africa. It’s really a good thing we got started early in this endeavor because it’s taking weeks and weeks just to make a simple car sale! When we bought it, it took weeks and weeks so we knew it wouldn’t be easy, but it does make me wonder about the people who really have to live here and try to function with that type of bureaucracy for things that should be so simple. I don’t even want to imagine what one has to do to buy a house around here! Well at the current 11.75% interest rate, most people don’t have to worry about that one…….
Visiting the Newspaper
Went to visit the newspaper printing plant. Our neighbor, Esther, who is an events photographer has lots of connections in the paper business. One of the reporters for the daily newspapers, The Republikien, took us around the plant and explained the process from gathering and collecting information and writing the articles to the actual printing. There are many newspapers in Windhoek, published in various languages: Afrikaans, German and English. Each caters to its particular language speaking clientele. However, most are published at the same plant we visited. This is quite refreshing given that in the States most local papers are being gobbled up by the likes of the USA Today crowd. Because so many papers are published at this one plant, the place never shuts down—it’s 24 hours of non-stop printing.
Ruan (the political reporter for the Republikien and Esther’s friend) showed us the presses, the prep area, the ad department, the writer’s pit, and the archives. It’s a full color operation and the newspapers produced are quite sophisticated in their layout, color and design. We also got to see the storage area where the huge rolls of paper are kept. It was a most interesting tour and worked out well with the unit of inquiry for Annie’s class—Get A Job. Who knows as much as Annie likes to peruse the paper, maybe she’ll be the next Nellie Bly.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Thanks LSU's Coach Mainieri
One of the former Fulbrighters to Namibia, Steve Grey, had the idea to start a baseball team during his stint here. Steve’s kids also attended Windhoek International and so naturally that is where he chose to base the team. He went through considerable effort to get equipment shipped over here since Cricket and not Baseball is what is practiced in these here parts. He was in contact with a little league team back home in his native Michigan. They sent uniforms, balls, bats and gloves among other things. When his tour was up he needed someone to whom he could hand over the reins. Naturally this then fell to Reid and his Fulbright colleague, Larkin Powell.
“The team” is an extension of WIS’s after school activities program, so it consists of just about anybody and his brother from year 4 on up. There’s also a number of boys who participate from a nearby orphanage associated with the school, Orlindi. Kelly usually runs over there and fetches the boys, typically about 6 or 7 in number, who then pile up in the back of the Polytechnic’s Toyota Corolla. They pile back in after practice to return.
The practice field may see 20 to 25 kids at any given time. The numbers vary depending on what else is going on that day. There hasn’t been a day when someone new hasn’t shown up and asked to play. Play, for us, has been the main objective of this all so international of exercises. We’ve tried to give the kids some basic skills and a general background concerning the rules, but we’ve also just approached this with the idea that it should be fun. Given that we’ve got kids from Israel, the US, the Netherlands, Iceland, and Namibia (just to name a few places) and from all income levels—the sons and daughters of ambassadors to orphans—it’s been an amazing lesson in the power of sport to unite all participants in a common sense of purpose and in the spirit of having a little fun together no matter how diverse their backgrounds might be.
We, of course, immediately thought about a role for LSU’s Baseball Program, National Collegiate Champs, in all of this. Reid wrote to Coach Mainieri and requested any kind of leftovers from the camps LSU runs for aspiring young athletes. Coach Mainieri’s reply was prompt and he put his assistant, Will Davis, right on it. Will had a bunch of t-shirts and caps all emblazoned with the LSU logo sent over FedEX for our rag-tag group of budding baseball aficionados. We held somewhat of a lottery among the kids in order to distribute them since there were an unequal number of shirts vs. caps. My brother also sent over a couple dozen baseballs and it felt like Mardi Gras handing these out. I was completely mobbed by the little munchkins. Although the shirts tended to run to the extra-large sizes, the kids were tickled pink with their acquisitions. They were especially pleased after Reid explained to them just who the LSU Tigers were and what kind of a baseball legacy they have. Who knows, maybe one of these days one of these kids will end up in Louisiana batting for the Tigers. There are a few of them that can really whack the ball.
Unfortunately, we’ve yet to find someone to whom we can now hand the reins and time is running short on us. We’ve harassed everyone we know, but we’re not yet ready to give up on it!
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Namibian National Elections
The Namibian Parliamentary and Presidential Elections are scheduled for Nov. 27 & 28th. The ruling Party, SWAPO (Southwest Africa People’s Organization) which worked and fought to gain Namibian independence back in the 80’s & 90’s is predicted to win without too much of a show from the opposition. Although there’s been a few incidents of some wild talk, most of which has been directed at the former colonizers, Britain and Germany, there hasn’t been any violence per se accompanying these speeches. In fact, we’ve heard so little in regard to campaign speech as compared to American elections, where the presidential candidates begin advertising two years in advance, that we’ve hardly noticed there’s an election on. This week however, Reid and I have begun to get a little antsy in regard to what might accompany the voting when we read the pictured advertisement hawking riot insurance! This is Africa after all and no one ever really can predict what’s going to happen come election time. All one has to do is look at Kenya or Zimbabwe for examples of things gone wrong. I guess that’s the fear this particular insurance company is trying to capitalize on. We'll keep everyone posted on the progress of the elections.
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Halloween in Namibia
Although Namibia’s population has a large component of British heritage, Halloween is not a widely celebrated custom here. There weren’t a whole lot of costumes available for purchase in the stores and most businesses are already focused on Christmas and their displays and product lines reflect this accordingly. The kids’ school, WIS, did allow the students to dress in costume on the Friday before and did hold an afterschool activity in the spirit of the tradition.
One of the mothers, incidentally of Brazilian origin but who has spent time in the States, organized a ‘Trick or Treat’ event in her “neighborhood” on the Friday evening and invited the kids from school as well as the neighborhood to participate. It must be noted that neighborhoods here don’t exist in the same way as they do in the States. In much of the city of Windhoek, houses are surrounded by high walls topped with electric or concertina wire. Every house is equipped with an electric gate. This makes it a bit difficult for people to get to know each other and house to house Trick or Treating virtually impossible. Eloisa’s neighborhood on the other hand is attached to the Country Club and is gated, so there are fewer walls and bars and the kids were able to walk down the street and knock on neighbors’ doors. Fewer bars do not equate to no bars and a couple of residents did hand out sweets between those that surround their porches it must be said (see photo above).
Despite the fact that Eloisa had sent out a notice, many of the residents weren’t exactly sure what to do when the gang of disguised munchkins appeared at their doorstep. One fellow was apparently caught unawares and so he invited the entire group into his house, opened his fridge and allowed them to take a soda of their choosing. By the time the last kid reached the fridge, he was down to one can of Tab (some of us are old enough to remember the first diet soda that’s still marketed here). I’m sure his wife wasn’t real happy with him when she got back from work! At another house, when the lady ran out of treats, she began distributing packages of yogurt.
All in all, a fun time was had by kids and adults alike. The kids especially enjoyed stuffing their mouths with treats and running from house to house with complete abandon. It was a bit strange though engaging in Halloween fun in the middle of Summer. I came home sporting a sun burn and guzzled down at least a liter of water to try and quench my thirst after running to keep up with Annie who was literally crazed from the unaccustomed sugar rush.
The following day, the Embassy community also engaged in its own version of Halloween. No one distributed soda, but we did have to jump in our cars and drive around town to the various embassy houses that were distributing treats. It did put an interesting twist on the custom as a convoy of American vehicles snaked its way from house to house and the masked kids jumped out to collect their treats.
I’m not sure that the custom of Halloween has a future in this country—it demands too much trust among residents and requires people to open their gates and let strangers in, strangers in search of free treats nonetheless! Perhaps if they did do so every now and again, they could finally rid themselves of the architecture of apartheid that continues to characterize this place. What a concept!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)