Wednesday 27 May 2015

Cracking Malaysia




We left Siberia on our 32nd wedding anniversary and arrived at Kuala Lumpur the next day both tired, fractious and ill tempered. We fell out. I considered getting a divorce, but I have really been looking forward to coming to Malaysia and without Liz I would have no reason to be here, so we made up.

I have been here before, but never for more than a few days passing through, so this is an opportunity to properly get to know the country. First impressions have a dreamlike quality because KL, where we are this week before moving to a much smaller town, is such a contrast to where we have been living. Whenever possible I like to travel overland and get an understanding of how far I’m going but there is something magical about flying and, after a fitful night on the plane, we’ve stepped out into a different world as cleanly as Alice through her looking glass.




From a low density town built in the middle of nowhere to a skyscraper city constantly expanding; from our Soviet style apartment block to a 5 star hotel; from a land which is extremely cold and very dry to one which is never cold, always humid and where it rains at some point almost every day; from bread, potatoes and horse meat to rice, noodles and seafood and from copious beer and vodka to what has so far been a very disappointing attempt to find something to drink.
Next week we will be further north, in Kuala Kangsar where we will be making our home and which is also the residence of the Sultan of Perak. I have always found that the truest experience of a country is to be found in the small places and not the big cities, so once there I will try in earnest to crack the code to understanding life in Malaysia. But for the next few days we have to put up with the hotel.

Monday 18 May 2015

From cold and dry to hot and wet



This is the final update for this blog not just because it is the end of spring but because it is the end of our time in Kazakhstan. Next week we will be starting a new life in Malaysia from where I will write a new blog.




The melting ice, I imagine all the way back to the Altay Mountains in China, caused the River Irtysh to swell and flood the land on the left bank as far as the eye could see. I hadn't understood why a path I often walk on is raised on an embankment, but that became a mile long jetty around a watery landscape with Sunday picnickers dotted along its route. The locals in Pavlodar aren't pork pie and a bit of tomato people; their picnics involved advanced pyrotechnics to barbecue skewered meat over twig fuelled fires. Now they've gone and the water has rapidly receded, but they've left all their rubbish behind.


Attitudes towards litter seem to be a clear marker between developed and developing countries. A couple of months ago I was travelling through Myanmar and remember on a rail journey carefully kicking the remains of my meal under the seat in the hope that it would eventually be found by a cleaner. I realised that if I left it in view a helpful Burmese would dispose of all the paper and plastic in the local manner by throwing it out of the train window.

When the ice outside our apartment building melted it revealed a layer of rubbish that had been held in its grip all winter and was quickly dealt with by a cleaner with a brush and cardboard box. But in contrast to this attitude I also saw community groups tidying and prettifying their surroundings. This I learned is subbotnik and we were involved in cleaning up Liz’s school one Saturday.




Subbotnik was keenly promoted by Lenin as voluntary Saturday work on community projects. It seems like a metaphor for the tragedy of 20th century communism that it became debased from an opportunity for communities to work together, in order to take ownership of and pride in where they lived, to an enforced duty which effectively made it unpaid labour. It is good to see the tradition of subbotnik return to its original meaning nearly 100 years after it was first introduced, and it is a reflection on the hard working Kazakhs that they embrace it as a way to take their young country forward.

It may be easier to just not make the mess in the first place but, in a world where we interact with our electronic devices more than with our neighbours, there is a need for some form of shared social activity, and picking up litter can be as good as any.

Monday 11 May 2015

Siberian central heating and spring cleaning


Spring here isn’t the gradual change of season found in temperate climates but a transformation into a completely different world. For more than half the year the people are in a state of semi-hibernation; only leaving their homes out of necessity, heads down and eyes fixed, swaddled in layers of protective padding, to get to their place of work or forage for food from the local shops dotted at the bottoms of concrete apartment blocks.

But then the world moves on its axis and children emerge to kick footballs and play on the swings, old woman who haven’t been seen for months occupy the wooden benches and blink in the warm sunlight, and from our apartment can be heard a rhythmic thwack. This is spring cleaning. Young men are sent out with the rugs from their homes which they drape over the children’s’ playground equipment and ritually beat. No doubt this was an important task after a winter in a yurt with a wood fire that had been kept burning for months but, with a custom of always removing outdoor shoes and central heating, it seems less of a necessity in apartment living. And the central heating is ‘central’.


January 7th is Christmas Day in the Orthodox Church which uses the Julian calendar and May 8th Victory Day to celebrate the successful conclusion to the Great Patriotic War, but in Pavlodar the dates that everyone knows are October 15th and April 20th; this is when the heating is turned on and off. It comes from a power station on the edge of town through many miles of large bore pipes which are mostly underground. The system constantly needs attention and there always seems to be a digger working somewhere to remove the sandy soil and fix a leak, but the radiators are fed with water that makes them too hot to touch and they kept our apartment warm and cosy. The only control on the temperature is to open and close the windows.




We went back to the centre of town for the end-of-war celebrations. There was marching and bands playing patriotic tunes and the crowd was much larger than it had been for Unity Day. The bulk of casualties from the Second World War were borne by the Soviet Union and it is commendable that their sacrifice is not forgotten, but I felt saddened that bloodshed and chauvinism had so much greater appeal than the tolerance and understanding celebrated on Unity Day. A hundred years ago Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon and their contemporaries changed how war is perceived in our culture and commemorations are now sombre affairs where tribute is paid to those who died in the service of their country. Here in the old USSR the emphasis is much more on celebrating victory and triumphalism.

I preferred Unity Day.


Monday 4 May 2015

May Day in Kazakhstan




While next week’s UK election looks to be a close call, the Kazakhstan presidential election last week was something of a non-event, with the incumbent polling 97.5% of the vote. Nursultan Nazarbayev has uniquely been in power since before the country existed, as he was previously president of the Soviet Republic of Kazakhstan, and is now viewed as the father of the nation whom it would be unpatriotic not to vote for.
 In fairness he does seem to be an extraordinarily capable man with sound common sense and, most importantly for a nation builder, policies that seek to encourage peaceful co-existence, co-operation and inclusion. A fine example of this was the Mayday holiday; in a delightful contrast to the machismo of Soviet era tanks and rocket launchers rolling through Moscow’s Red Square, Kazakhstan now calls this Unity Day and celebrates the diversity of ethnicity in the country.

The Kazakh people love singing and dancing and without a cloud in the sky in Pavlodar, a stage was built in front of the main civic building and the road closed to traffic. But what we found most interesting were the couple of dozen stage sets that had been erected opposite and decorated by different groups to display their culture. I read that there are 120 nationalities (a looser term than countries) represented in Kazakhstan and we had fun deciphering Cyrillic writing and trying to guess what region each display represented. We had our picture taken with an Armenian girl from Liz’s school, were given fizzy drinks from Ingushetia and practised our Chinese with some men from Xinjiang Province. Many of the groups belonged to the old USSR or present day Russia, and probably had their roots in Stalin’s practice of sending people or populations he didn’t like the look of to Siberia.




While the mean spirited rise of UKIP shames Britain, I like to think that President Nazarbayev’s drive for a country that sees difference as a positive attribute, and strives to respect all its peoples, stems from a natural desire for equality and fairness. But it is also a pragmatic response to uniting a vast country whose borders are lines on a map more than showing any cultural cohesion. A quarter of the population (half in Pavlodar) are ethnic Russians and the president will be acutely aware of recent events in the Ukraine.


The variety of nationalities did not extend to the food, and we sat at one of the temporary outside cafes to eat plov, a ubiquitous Central Asian dish of rice, vegetables and horse meat cooked together in a giant pan over an open fire. While the first president, as he styles himself, is undoubtedly extremely popular, it is against a background of there being no effective opposition, which really makes the electoral process a charade. Evangelical democracy, touted as a new religion and used as an excuse for carrying out all manner of evils, may be overrated but the overwhelming support that Nazarbayev has garnered gives him the power of a benign dictator. The question then arises of who will follow him and will they be as benign.

Some measures have been taken to limit the power of future presidents (the first president is exempt), such as restricting their tenure to two terms, as is the case in the USA and China, but there does not seem to be a clear mechanism for a successor to rise up. Maybe Nazarbayev has learnt a trick from Elizabeth 1st  and is not keen to have a potential rival, but he cannot last forever. Or maybe he can. He is revered in the country more than is generally attributed to mere mortals and from his election posters he is clearly getting younger.