Pajero sold…

… donations found and loaded into Baby Beast, Baby Beast handed over to Village Ventures, enjoyed Bissau carnival in the evening. It was a successful day.

Unloading our boxes from the donation truck. Of course they have been at the very end of the truck, so we had to dig through 30 tons of boxes to reach them.
Lots of helping hands. Special thanks to József Kádár (always wearing a tie) and his wife (on his right) for transporting the donations of the Budapest Bamako to Africa every year. Free of charge of course, that is his contribution to the charity projects.
Handing over the keys of Baby Beast to Pam Young, founder of Village Ventures, and to Salihou, chief of operation of Village Ventures’ center in Diema/Mali.
108kg of medicine donations ready for the last part of their journey from Bissau to Bamako

Car selling frenzy continues

We just learned that all cars which are still in the city have to go to the closed area at the airport where the others already are. All cars, even those which are not for sale. When we can / are forced to go depends on a mysterious “general” who is still sleeping after the carnival last night. As soon as he wakes up, we have to go. This is a truly African schedule 🙂

About the situation in Bissau

There are some horror stories about the situation in Bissau in the official Facebook group of Budapest-Bamako. Although the stories are partly true, everything is OK here.

First of all, the 4 day carnival started in Bissau today. During carnival, no cars are allowed to drive in the city starting from the early afternoon. We knew that, but we did not know how aggressively the police prosecute offenders. We have seen a motorbike rider being pulled from his vehicle and beaten up by the police because he ignored the ban on driving. One of our fellow teams was stopped while they were searching for a hotel room and they were not allowed to continue (we share one of our rooms with them now). The problem here is that it was not clearly communicated if any driving is banned or just entering the city from the outside. And of course the aggressive behavior of the police.

The second issue is that the government wants to avoid that people are selling their cars without paying import duties and tax. The only information we received was that people who did not pay the import duties in advance (via the B2 office) will have difficulties selling the car. What we did not know is that the government is trying to control the sales process by collecting the cars’ registration documents and by locking the cars into a stadium outside of the city. Moreover they are doing that without knowing which cars are actually for sale and which are not. Some 50 cars have been “confiscated” because of that, the others (including Baby Beast and Pajero) could escape. The problem here is a combination of a stupid approach (the police don’t know which car is for sale, they just catch whomever they can get), and of missing / wrong information to the teams (there is an information letter dated Feb 3 circulating now, but nobody knew about it until the first “confiscations” occured.

It is annoying and, for those teams whose cars have been taken by the police, for sure also scary, but it is nothing dangerous.

I am more worried about a lot of things being stolen and some teams even being violently robbed. We will keep our eyes open and try to enjoy the next days in Bissau.

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