Sunday, 15 March 2009

A funny old world

So there I was in Kathmandu just getting to know the new VSO partner organisation I was going to work with and I get this e-mail from an old friend. "Need a Finance & Ops person in Singapore for 3 months, can you start next week?" Really difficult decision to leave VSO early but delaying until May, when we were due to finish, was not an option. Sheila thought I would need a new adventure post-VSO so encouraged me to say yes - I think the prospect of some time in Singapore blinded her to the reality of being on her own in Ktm and having to pack up the flat with no assistance from me (what's new she said). My bosses at VSO said they would be sad to see me go - although the Country Director's first question was "Will Sheila be staying?" - but understood that there is life after volunteering. A crazy 2 weeks finishing up in Kathmandu then 2 weeks ago today I arrived in Singapore.

As this is an interim job (the guy they thought they had recruited decided not to take up the offer), no gentle introduction back into the corporate world, I have been thrown in at the deep end including 2 days last week in Vietnam. Although I have no idea whether my new employer has a policy on blogs, it's probably not appropriate to tell you more about the job than it's finance & ops back in my old world of private equity (but not with 3i). After the first week staying with my friend/boss and his family, I'm now in a serviced apartment just 20 mins walk (pretty steamy even at 8am) from the office and close to plenty of late opening food courts. I'm on the 28th floor with a great view of the Padang and ships at anchor in the bay, I'll try and get some photos up soon.

My rapid departure from Nepal saved there being too many emotional farewells. There is no time now for reflection on 3 years in Nepal but I'm sure when I've finished 3 months in this dramatically different world, my memories of the place, the people, the work, the whole experience will remain hugely positive and continue to have an impact on how I view life - thank you Nepal, thank you VSO. I'll leave Sheila (with help from Josie) to keep up the great stories and pictures - and coping with load shedding, bandhs and packing up the flat, I'm sure she'll make me pay for this in due course!. For me, its not goodbye Nepal just
pheri betaula (see you again).

Cheers
Roshan


Saturday, 14 March 2009

Changes

Looking back I realise it is over a month since we last posted and lots has happened since then.

Whilst we were enjoying Srijana and Etienne's wedding party, Roshan took a call from Singapore which led him leaving Nepal two weeks later to take up very different work there. I'll leave him to fill in on this at another point.

So back to the wedding...

Etienne and Srijana met through VSO whilst Etienne was working as a volunteer and we wish them well as now wedding ceremonies and honeymoon over they are settling down to their new life together here in KTM.

And I'm still here too! I am staying on for a few more months as originally planned as there are still lots of things I want to be part of before leaving in May, such as working on standards for learning and development for children as they come to the end of the ECD stage. Nonetheless I am also very keen to visit Singapore again so will go for a few days in April with Josie, once we have spent a few days with Pauline, Roshan's stepmother, in Kerala. Then I will return for another month of work and the clearing and packing up of our Lazimpat flat.

There are other changes here too. A new six lane highway is being built, from the ring road to the east of Kathmandu, and each morning as I sit on the bus in a traffic jam I watch men in hard hats with a huge crane, piling machine and diggers only a few yards from where women are sitting on the ground selling a few peanuts, girls are washing carrots in the river and women and children are collecting water from a tap. And when I buy carrots in the little kiosk/shop behind our flat I remind myself of the filthy water they have been cleaned in and boil thoroughly or wash again with added iodine!

Another change is the renovation of the ground in front of the Ministry of Education - this is central KTM, 10 minutes walk from the flat and I am able to take a government bus from here to my office in Bhaktapur. As the rubbish was cleared this statue was uncovered and subsequently turf put down and paths laid.

Unsurprisingly the area has become an interesting place for this little girl to explore each morning.


And she has become very entertaining for some of the guards and me! Yesterday I was treated to her new word, "Welcome" and today to a salute and a dance.



Once again, with children my limited Nepali poses no problem and we communicate with gestures and the odd word or two!

Fuel shortage are reoccuring: "As the government fails to impress agitators...to guarantee proportional representation of indigenous and excluded communities...a fresh wave of national agitation is likely" states yesterday's Kathmandu Post.

Load shedding is still 16 hours a day and for the past two weeks we have had rumours that this is very likely to increase to 20 or more. But at this stage it has only been a rumour and whilst the power goes to schedule it means at least you can prepare a bit to be without it - I can charge my laptop and phone and am fortunate in having an internet package that I can use even when the power is off, so I can Skype Roshan and the UK. It is very difficult for businesses though and for the Department of Education there are three days with two hours and three with none during work hours..

And now, tonight my laptop battery won't last much longer either so time to go...best wishes to all, Sheila xx