Category: Media

AirTV International reports on parental alienation (inside)

AirTV International reports on parental alienation (inside)

The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth …

Andrew John Teague, founder of D.A.D.s (Dads Against Double Standards) and NAAP, has thanked us for supporting the world-wide battle to make parental alienation a crime.

He says: “A big massive thank you to Leigh and Andrea for their continuing support – they have written so many stories about parental alienation. They have been unbelievable in what they have done for us, our children, parents and families.”

Leigh G Banks, who runs the preservation society, a news and views service set up to help people facing a crisis in their lives, said: “We really are here to help keep parental alienation in the public eye… and as a fellow victim of PA it was a natural progression for the site to become involved in the fight.

One man’s story: https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/heartbreak-dad-tells-of-letters-his-alienated-daughter-refused-to-read/

Parental alienation is one of the most disgusting things an angry parent can do. They deliberately turn a child against the other parent and often make them hate …

“The lies that are told are shameful, the coercion, the abuse deliberately employed to hurt the other parent is shameful. It is as bad as domestic abuse except in cases of PA, it is the heart and soul of another human being the aggressor is battering. And as you can read in our pages, this ‘crime’ leads to people killing themselves.

“Suicide rates are frighteningly high. But it’s not only angry parents causing this problem, social workers, CAFCASS and family courts allow themselves to become weapons of the alienators.

“And yet the courts keep telling us how well they are doing, how compassionate they are, how understanding.

“But they ignore the fact that the real victim in parental alienation is the child… yes the child of the alienator is their real victim. These parents are destroying their own child’s security, future and happiness.

“We at the preservation society will continue to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Andrew and the tens of thousands of people across the world who stand up to fight the shame of parental alienation.”

Go here and scroll down to find more stories about PA – plenty of other stuff too – over the weeks we will be publishing more and more about alienated parents and grandparents AND OUR CHILDREN …

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/

#Parentalalienation #children #mums #dads #grandparents #family #aliens #world #unite #don’tbeavictim

Examiners face ‘Pound Zero’ in virus row with British Council

Examiners face ‘Pound Zero’ in virus row with British Council

The British Council has been attacked for what is describes as its ‘appalling lack of support’ as earnings for English language examiners’ crash to almost zero.

Hundred of the council’s markers have been brought to their financial knees after student numbers collapsed due to COVID-19.

The tests are used for visas to enter the UK, the US, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, to study, to work or emigrate.

Now the GMB union has told the British Council to implement the Chancellor’s job retention scheme to get money to examiners.

This followed a warning from bosses at the council telling examiners there was hardly any work at all ….

Charles Harrity, GMB senior organiser, said: “The council has shown an appalling lack of support for their examiners. The situation has now reached crisis point for many examiners as over the last month they saw their earnings fall off.  

“There are now hundreds of British Council workers facing an uncertain future with no income and no way to pay the bills. The council needs to begin utilising the Chancellor’s Job Retention Scheme immediately to ensure that the wages lost by their workers are recovered.  

“With the current crisis set to continue, they need to begin consultations with GMB on how to begin furloughing staff to mitigate any further hardship.” 

One examiner told the preservation society: “For me, during the first week of April, my take home pay was in the tens of pounds. On a normal week, that could be around £1000 for some people. The work had just dried up.

“We are paid per script. £1.84 for each one, and it should have increased to £1.88 at the beginning of the tax year, but it hasn’t.

“We heard the amount of marking would be small. Many of us were ready to start marking in the morning – but nothing.

“We’re on contracts – but through an agency. The contracts last for two years, but they always state they do not have to offer us work.”

The British Council specialises in international cultural and education. It works in more 100 countries: promoting a wider knowledge of the United Kingdom and the English language; encouraging cultural, scientific, technological and educational co-operation with the United Kingdom.

One examiner told us: “It is incredibly hard and very unnecessarily stressful work. We are constantly monitored.”

And the test can be tough on applicants too … it costs them about £170-£200 to take the test in the UK terms. But some candidates take the test more than 15 times

The British Council is governed by a Royal Charter. It is also a public corporation and an executive nondepartmental public body (NDPB), sponsored by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. Its headquarters are near Trafalgar Square

It’s chief executive, Sir Ciarán Devane, said: “We are all affected in some way by this pandemic.

“And this pandemic is challenging the British Council’s sustainability. Our operations are underpinned by the surplus from our revenue-generating activities. Pausing this work through so many countries places an extraordinary financial strain on us. We are working to reduce that stress and expect to make clear decisions in the weeks ahead.

“We recognise these tough decisions will affect teachers, pupils, university lecturers, international students, business people, artists, creatives and entrepreneurs. The impact is significant for all of us.”
A few years ago the British Council was fined £500,000 for breaking government pay rules over salaries for its new chief executive and chief finance officer.

The council said that because of an administrative oversight, it failed to seek approval from the Treasury to pay Sir Ciarán Devane more than the prime minister’s £142,500. Sir Ciarán was on a salary of £185,000 and received pension benefits worth £17,000 in 2014-15.

Asked why the chief executive is paid 30 per cent more than the prime minister, the council said the salary was comparable with other chief executive jobs in international organisations.

The council is believed to have an annual budget of £792m, including income of £490m from fees for English language teaching and assessment. It received £162m from the government.

Nick Cave talks of ‘sitting in the kitchen and listening to the new Dylan song as if it is your last …’

Nick Cave talks of ‘sitting in the kitchen and listening to the new Dylan song as if it is your last …’

In one of his regular letter to his fans, Nick Cave has written that he finds Dylan’s 17 minutes epic Murder Most Foul to be ‘extremely moving’.

He writes, ‘Murder Most Foul is a perplexing but beautiful song and, like many people, I have been extremely moved by it.

At the heart of this seventeen-minute epic is a terrible event, the assassination of JFK — a dark vortex that threatens to pull everything into it, just as it did in the USA back in 1963.

Whirling around the incident Dylan weaves a litany of loved things — music mostly — that reach into the darkness, in deliverance. As the song unfolds he throws down lifeline after lifeline, insistent and mantra-like, and we are lifted, at least momentarily, free of the event.

Dylan’s relentless cascade of song references points to our potential as human beings to create beautiful things, even in the face of our own capacity for malevolence. ‘Murder Most Foul’ reminds us that all is not lost, as the song itself becomes a lifeline thrown into our current predicament.

The instrumentation is formless and fluid and very beautiful. Lyrically it has all the perverse daring and playfulness of many of Dylan’s great songs, but beyond that there is something within his voice that feels extraordinarily comforting, especially at this moment.

It is as though it has travelled a great distance, through stretches of time, full of an earned integrity and stature that soothes in the way of a lullaby, a chant, or a prayer.

As for whether this is the last time we will hear a new Bob Dylan song. I certainly hope not.

But perhaps there is some wisdom in treating all songs, or for that matter, all experiences, with a certain care and reverence, as if encountering these things for the last time.

I say this not just in the light of the novel coronavirus, rather that it is an eloquent way to lead one’s life and to appreciate the here and now, by savouring it as if it were for the last time.

To have a drink with a friend as if it were the last time, to eat with your family as it were the last time, to read to your child as if it were the last time, or indeed, to sit in the kitchen listening to a new Bob Dylan song as if it were the last time.

It permeates all that we do with greater meaning, placing us within the present, our uncertain future, temporarily arrested.’

Update: Austria opens borders (a bit) UK stays ‘shut’ and in Czech Republic you can get your bike repaired…

Update: Austria opens borders (a bit) UK stays ‘shut’ and in Czech Republic you can get your bike repaired…

Spain chose a public holiday in many of its regions to allow millions of people out of lockdown and return to work in a move which gave hope to many afraid of catching coronavirus or facing financial ruin.

But are these two suffering countries just tilting at their metaphorical health windmillls?

Many say simply that they are making a mistake as Russia, for instance, reports thousands of new infections, a record daily rise that brings the total number of infections to almost 20,000.

It also comes as a professor at the University of Hong Kong has warned that if countries try to go back to work too early, they risk a second major wave of infections.

“I think having timelines is going to be very challenging. No country is going to want to open up too early, and then be the first major country to have a big second wave,” Ben Cowling told CNBC.

Two journalists in lockdown share their thoughts https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/strains-boats-and-planes-rodney-and-leigh-talk-about-the-on-going-virus-crisis/

This is because, even if they overcome their first wave, they will be susceptible to infections imported from other countries which are still into their first round of infections, or even going through a second wave, which could be starting now in China, Cowling said.

The U.K. looks set to extend its lockdown measures into early or perhaps even late May, just as other European coronavirus hotspots start to lift some restrictions on businesses.

But Italy is coming out of its worst days, with experts saying that they have followed a “trustworthy” trends in the past few weeks.

Businesses are beginning to reopen there too although the country’s lockdown will remain, at least in principle, until May 3 and beyond.

The ‘public holiday’ return to work in Spain is for non-essential workers such as factory and construction personnel and police were handing out millions of masks at Spanish metro stations, although the wider coronavirus lockdown remains in force. 

Those returning include metalworkers, builders, cleaners, factory and shipyard workers and people involved in sanitation and security. 

But Spain and Italy aren’t the only European countries taking tentative steps towards normality – Austria is allowing some small shops and you can soon drive through the country if you promise not to stop. Hardware and garden stores to open while Denmark is opening schools.

Some measures have already been relaxed in the Czech Republic, where essential travel out of the country is allowed now and hardware stores and bicycle shops are re-opening.

Despite the tentative good news the UK government is still being criticized for a shortage of personal protective equipment on the front lines and an inadequate level of nationwide testing.

However,  Prime Minister Boris Johnson, just released from hospital, praised the National Health Service for “saving” his life.  

As the country’s death toll passed 10,000, one of the government’s scientific advisers, Jeremy Farrar, told the BBC that the UK was likely to be “one of the worst, if not the worst-affected country in Europe.”

President Donald Trump, however, is jumping on the positive bandwagon and has pledged to resuscitate the US economy next month. But big-city mayors, state governors and even some of the administration’s own experts are urging caution, wary that a premature loosening of restrictions could spark a second wave of the virus.

Tags: Coronavirus, Spain, Italy, Czech, Slovakia, UK, work, lockdown, lifted, fears

Ukraine in Chernobyl radiation fears only days after coronavirus lockdown

Ukraine in Chernobyl radiation fears only days after coronavirus lockdown

Less than two weeks after Ukraine’s Chernivtsi region was placed on a full coronavirus lockdown forest fires in the nearby Chernobyl exclusion zones may have led to an increase in radiation levels.

The fires have caused fears in Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, 60 miles south of the restricted areas.

However, Ukrainian officials have asked for calm and firefighters are said to have managed to put out two forest blazes which began apparently after someone started a grass fire.

More than 100 firefighters backed by planes and helicopters have been sent to fight the remaining blazes.

A video with a Geiger counter showing radiation at 16 times above normal has been released on social media and an official statement says fire had spread to about 100 hectares of forest.

An official had said on Saturday that increased radiation in some areas had led to “difficulties” in fighting the fire.

The country’s emergency ministry put out a warning for Kyiv about poor air quality but said it was related to meteorological conditions, and not to the fire.

A few days earlier, on April 3, with five quarantine checkpoints set up near police stations at the in Chernivtsi region officials said this: “The checkpoints will start working at noon on April 3. From that moment, any passenger vehicle will be blocked.”

The double blow has chilled Ukraines who were directly in line for the Chernobyl nuclear fall-out which terrified Ukraine, Belarus and West Russia, with some areas contaminated indefinitely.

The World Nuclear Association said: “Most of the released material was deposited close by as dust and debris, but the lighter material was carried by wind over Ukraine, Belarus, Russia, and to some extent over Scandinavia and Europe.”

Police have arrested a suspect, a 27-year-old man from the area who reportedly told police he had set grass and rubbish on fire in three places “for fun”.

Chernobyl polluted a large area of Europe when its fourth reactor exploded in April 1986, with the region immediately around the power plant the worst affected. People are not allowed to live within 30km of the power station.

The three other reactors at Chernobyl continued to generate electricity until the power station finally closed in 2000. A giant protective dome was put in place over the fourth reactor in 2016.

Strains, boats and planes … Rodney and Leigh talk about the on-going virus crisis

Strains, boats and planes … Rodney and Leigh talk about the on-going virus crisis

The world has been brought to its knees by a brainless. spiky ball of genetic material coated in fat and chemicals . It is only 80 billionths of a metre in diameter.

Yep, this is the invisible assassin the human race has come to fear…

But don’t forget Coronaviruses have been causing problems for us for decades – strains are known to cause common colds and two types have caused outbreaks of deadly illnesses: severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers).

Now the world has almost stopped, planes are grounded, city streets are abandoned and we have watched more than 100,000 people die … yes, this is the stuff that dystopian films are made of.

But this isn’t a film, this is real life. And death.

Here journalist and broadcaster Leigh G Banks – locked down in Slovakia – and AirTV International boss Rodney Hearth – stranded in Portugal – take a gritty and sometimes witty look at fake news and lies.

And THE TRUTH of what is going on in our world of sickness.

Sorry about the quality of the film, but internet availability is depleted in mountains of Slovakia where Leigh is trapped.

Join us as we ALL fight to make parental alienation illegal

Join us as we ALL fight to make parental alienation illegal

Andrew John Teague, founder of D.A.D.s (Dads Against Double Standards) and NAAP, has thanked us for supporting the world-wide battle to make parental alienation a crime.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-DhlrMqKNk

In a recent Facebook video circulated to thousands, he says: “A big massive thank you to Leigh and Andrea for their continuing support – they have written so many stories about parental alienation. They have been unbelievable in what they have done for us, our children, parents and families.”

Leigh G Banks, who runs the preservation society, a news and views service set up to help people facing a crisis in their lives, said: “We really are here to help keep parental alienation in the public eye… and as a fellow victim of PA it was a natural progression for the site to become involved in the fight.

One man’s story: https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/heartbreak-dad-tells-of-letters-his-alienated-daughter-refused-to-read/

Parental alienation is one of the most disgusting things an angry parent can do. They deliberately turn a child against the other parent and often make them hate …

“The lies that are told are shameful, the coercion, the abuse deliberately employed to hurt the other parent is shameful. It is as bad as domestic abuse except in cases of PA, it is the heart and soul of another human being the aggressor is battering. And as you can read in our pages, this ‘crime’ leads to people killing themselves.

“Suicide rates are frighteningly high. But it’s not only angry parents causing this problem, social workers, CAFCASS and family courts allow themselves to become weapons of the alienators.

“And yet the courts keep telling us how well they are doing, how compassionate they are, how understanding.

“But they ignore the fact that the real victim in parental alienation is the child… yes the child of the alienator is their real victim. These parents are destroying their own child’s security, future and happiness.

“We at the preservation society will continue to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Andrew and the tens of thousands of people across the world who stand up to fight the shame of parental alienation.”

Go here and scroll down to find more stories about PA – plenty of other stuff too – over the weeks we will be publishing more and more about alienated parents and grandparents AND OUR CHILDREN …

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/

Parental alienation, children, mums, dads, grandparents, family, aliens, world, unite ,don’t be a victim

How Dylan finally came back all the way as brainless ‘bug’ brought world to its knees

How Dylan finally came back all the way as brainless ‘bug’ brought world to its knees

Dylan sings “you can always come back, but you can’t comeback all the way…”

Well he has comeback all the way – right to the top of the Billboard charts with Murder Most Foul.

The 17 minute single has hit the world like a postcard from Dystopia.

Listen to Murder Most Foul and watch Bob Mori’s amazing visual interpretation here – https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/603-2/

Yes, Dylan has sold tens of millions of albums, written more than 500 songs which have been recorded by in excess of 2,000 artists – he’s even won  Nobel Prize for Literature. Yet chart-topping success as far as singles go has eluded him.

He has been left behind by song and dance men and women like Michael Jackson whose biggest solo hit on the Billboard chart was his 1982 hit, ‘Billie Jean’.

And  Madonna currently holds the record for the most number-one songs in the 43-year history of the chart.

Dylan’s first album was released in March 1962 to mixed reviews. His singing confounded many critics. By comparison, Dylan’s second album, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, in May 1963, sounded a clarion call to youth.

When The Beatles crashed into America in 1964 with “I Want to Hold Your Hand” at No. 1, Dylan was still a folk singer who hadn’t had a mainstream hit. That changed the following year, with “Subterranean Homesick Blues,” with a backing band.

Shortly afterward (June ’65), The Byrds’ cover of Dylan’s Mr. Tambourine Man hit No. 1 in America. At that point Dylan’s Like a Rolling Stone nearly topped the charts but the Beatles’ Help! kept him at No. 2.

Positively 4th Street went to No. 7 and Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 almost topped the charts.

This time, the only thing standing between Dylan’s Rainy Day Women and No. 1 was The Mamas and The Papas’ Monday, Monday. But Dylan had the second No. 2 of his career, Lay Lady Lay in 1969, peaking at No. 7 in September.

But that’s not to say he has never been at number one, he has – with his albums!

He released multiple albums that topped the Billboard 200 chart. His first success came in 1974 with Planet Waves, then the classic Blood on the Tracks,. In 1976, Dylan made it three years in a row at No. 1 with Desire.

Though he continued releasing successful albums in the following decades Dylan didn’t have another No. 1 until 2006’s Modern Times. Three years later, he did again with Together Through Life.

So, why did Murder Most Foul take him to the top when songs including Like a Rolling Stone, Lay Lady Lay and Subterranean Homesick Blues couldn’t?

Well, first it hit the world like a grand tome of history mapping how America metamorphosed into political darkness, beginning with organized violence — then it chops through the jungles of Vietnam, screws the exploitation of inner cities, the contamination of skies and rivers, eulogises Gerry and the Pacemakers and Wolfman Jack amongst so many others, and hangs the whole 17 minutes of mournful creativity on JFK’s bloody journey to hospital and ultimately oblivion.

And Murder Most Foul according to Dylan,  takes the stance that JFK’s dispatch was an execution by the still invisible men.

But more than anything, it is simply a timely trip into dystopia as the world begins falling to its knees from a simple, dead and brainless bug.

Listen to Murder Most Foul and watch Bob Mori’s amazing visual interpretation here –

https://leighgbankspreservationsociety.blog/603-2/

TAGS: Dylan, JFK, dystopia, murder, foul, Billboard, Kennedy, charts, No 1

Locked down by the virus of Hostile Silly Bankers who don’t Care

Locked down by the virus of Hostile Silly Bankers who don’t Care

Well, I suppose today is as good as any for a faithful customer to be left to die as far as HSBC is concerned.

Forget coronavirus for a moment and let’s look at the virus of stupidity spreading through our fabulously faceless world of technological brick walls…

We phoned the despicable HSBC bank for help after we got hacked, inexplicably, by a woman we actually know through social media. We know it’s her because she left her name!

The problem was that this ridiculous woman had purloined my Gmail account password for some reason – made off with it like some mad magpie flapping her bingo wings and flicking her tail feathers with her roly-poly arse, and cackled in the dead prairie lands of her life.

Sadly, as I have as many holes in my memory as a tennis racket, I had no idea what the password was .. a bit frustrating as, when I tried to reclaim my Gmail account by changing it, Gmail asked my for my last password!

What!

Well, surely, if I knew my last password I wouldn’t be trying to change it because I’d forgotten it!

So, after many many many failed attempts to remember it, Google banned me.

And one of the unexpected knock-on effects of this ban was that, when I went to do a little bit of on-line banking I could no longer get on there either, yep, because the account was linked to my Gmail account …

Not a problem I thought – we don’t care about the goof-balls at Google, we’ll go straight to the ‘world’s local bank’ .. yes, we could bank on them to get us back up and banking in the bat of a forgetful eye. Of course we can!

An hour and half later we found that HSBC didn’t actually give a flying spreadsheet about its customers either.

The first 30 minutes was spent listening to repetitive tin-can alley muzak occasionally interrupted by a robotic voice berating me over and over for wasting the bank’s time in a world crisis and that I’d have to wait for ages anyway and that we are all going to die and only their brilliantly wonderful working-at-home staff would survive unscathed.

Finally, the music stopped … and Gloria picked up the phone in her chintzy little safe-haven lounge and said: “Hello … how may I help you today?”

And that was the beginning of my HSBC near-death sentence.

Oblivious to what was about to happen, I explained the problem, told her we were in lockdown in a foreign country and needed access to our account to pay rent and buy food. I told Gloria we couldn’t do it because our ‘stolen’ email account was our access to our online banking!

So, we dutifully entered the identification process … she asked my name. I told her.

First mistake … my name has an unusual spelling – basically it’s spelt the girl’s way – so I spelt it out for her.

L-E-I-G-H …

She told me off … ‘I don’t need you to spell it out … “
“Sorry,” I said. “It’s an unusual spelling, I thought it might help to prove it’s me!”

“I’ll decide that,” she said from the safety of the armchair in her lounge as she sipped on her fifth penocolada and absently watched daytime TV.

Then she said: “I have more questions for you but I can only accept your first answer!”

I replied: “I thought we were trying to get life-saving funds freed for me – not taking part in a TV game show!”

She said: “I am doing this for your own protection.”

I said: “You should be helping to get my money to me, not making it more difficult then!”

You could hear her attitude begin to goose-step round her lounge.

“I can only accept your first answer.”

Next question:

Which branch do you bank at? I got it right!

What telephone number is attached to your account. I wasn’t sure .. I opened the account 20 years ago. I took a stab in the dark! WRONG!

The goose-stepping came to a deafening halt and she took aim.

“I am sorry, that is wrong.”

Me: “Oh, it must be this one then … “ RIGHT!

WRONG!

“I am sorry sir, I can only accept your first answer.”

“But that answer was right.”

“I am only doing this for your own protection sir.”

“What! Leaving me in lock down in a foreign country 2,000 miles from home without any money – that is protecting me?”

“I am sorry sir, please stop shouting at me … I am only trying to help.”

Gloria changed channels on the TV, slipped deeper into her armchair and nibbled on a cucumber sandwich.

I sat in my own prison-cell of a lounge and wondered where I was going to get the cash from to buy a loaf of bread.

***

Now, obviously in reality, we aren’t going to die from lack of funds, there are many things we can and did do.

But it is fair to say that in this time of crisis when people have so much on their minds – like staying healthy, like not dying – why is HSBC turning a straightforward action, like changing contact details for online banking in to a tawdry TV game show hosted by a robotic clerk without an ounce of intelligence beyond her robotic script and screen? And telling us how wonderful she is?

HSBC is historically particularly good at this kind of stupidity … a few weeks before we left the now-inclement shores of good old Blighty, I went in to my branch of HSBC, a small leafy country town branch, a town where everybody knows everybody.

This is what happened:

I got to the counter and the middle-aged middle-class women behind it – who has known me for twenty years and says hello to me on the street – said: “Hello Mr Banks how are you today?”

I said: “I’m very well thank you. How are you?”

She replied: “I’m very well thank you… how is Andrea and your children of course?”

“They are all fine thank you!”

“Glad to hear it … how may I help you today?”

“I would like to withdraw one hundred pounds from my account please.”

“No problem, Mr Banks… do you have any form of identification?”

“Well, yes I do … you know me very well.” I smiled.

“I’m sorry Mr Banks I need some proof of identity before I can help you … it is for your own protection!”

What a load of bankers!

Under malaria skies

Under malaria skies

October 13, 2011, 5.30 pm, New Delhi:

Night comes in like a disease in New Delhi, mosquitoes bring it in on their backs. As darkness falls stray dogs dodge blaring traffic and beggars melt into the roads. A bear dances for its supper in a stinking alleyway.

Then the lights go out.

Yes, the ninth biggest city in the world has just had its tenth power cut of the day. They say its because the  golden office block in Guargon is draining all the electricity, it is festooned with millions of  bulbs for the Festival of Light after all.  Only it and the Mercedes Benz decal suspended high above the city still  fizz  against air so polluted it chokes out the moon and the stars.  Twenty million of us, beggars and businessmen, travellers and tramps, the gullible and the gurus, scurry like cockroaches in the dark.

This city will make you ill, there’s no doubt; if the mosquitoes or   bats, gone insane because of rabies, don’t get you then the money will. People talk about filthy lucre but their ain’t no money as dirty as a 10 rupee note.

The problem is the lack of sanitation. People go behind market stalls or in the gutters outside the run-down old colonial stores with names like Ye Olde Shoppe, and bring a whole new meaning to hand wipes.  The detritus of life  is    transferred to the cash in their pockets. Ten rupees is worth pennies but in a desperate city like this it buys polluted water and rotten veg.

Ten rupees is the true price of Delhi Belly.

tuk-tuk

A tuk-tuk  keeps a constant bleat on its horn as  it weaves its way through families, tramps and gurus, sacred cows, pigs and snuffling canines, cars, bikes,  multi-coloured  juggernauts  and sweating rickshaws.

I’m standing on the baking pavement outside New Delhi rail station. I’ve just disembarked from the overnight train from Nepal, I can still  see it steaming like an  old snake by the platform, brittle paint like dry scales.

The skin-and-bone one eyed tuk-tuk driver stops less than a hand’s length away from me and croaks through the dust in suprisingly cultured English: “You would like a lift Sir? I’ll take you where you wish to go.”

It makes sense to escape this cacophony, so I jump on board. In a way it was bound to be  a mistake – the bench seat is ripped and smells of damp, ideal for cockroaches. And immediately one scurries across my lap. It’s as big as a thumb.  The driver reaches over and squashes it between his fingers, a white liquid spurts as he pelicans it away.

“Sorry sir,” he smiles and turns his head to face me, once again he surprises me; he must be a hundred years old!

“I try to keep them at bay, I’m a clean driver.”   I have to turn away, I feel sick to my stomach as he licks the remnants of the cockroach from his fingers.

Then I see that the bicycle tyres taking me to my destination are bald and some of the wheel’s spokes are missing.   Tuk-tuks are three-wheeler bikes with a canopy and motorboat engine and they may be just about the cheapest and most dangerous form of transport known to man.

The driver’s horn bleats like an angry sheep as he begins to weave his way  back into the madding crowd.  I keep one eye on the road and the other looking out for cockroaches …

Driving in Delhi is like the rest of the city, on the face of it it makes no sense at all but underlying it there’s a reason and the reason is symbiosis; everything, from sacred cows to corrupt coppers, fakirs and gods and ghosts rub along. Driving is no different, it is a mercurial waltz, a liquid dance of metal and man, tuk-tuk, car and lorry, bicycle and beast sliding  round each other with a syncopated rhythm – and the constant blasting of horns isn’t aggression, its a beat, a marking of time, it quickens or slows the dance.

We are   weaving our way through Karol Bargh on a multi-lane highway parallel  with the ancient railway sidings filled with rusting carriages, gantries and   rotten derrick cars, craning like the skeletons of giant birds. It’s a sorry sight.

Then I witness the oddest thing; an ancient elephant lumbering slowly through the traffic. Stranger than it being there though is its appearance; it seems diffused, somehow insubstantial, shimmering darkly as if not quite formed. It strikes me instantly that it’s like watching it on the dirty grey screen of the backyard cinema I   visited in Jaipur …

But it is more inexplicable than an old cinematic trick, all at once this creature  is there and yet it isn’t.

I look at the driver, he seems deliberately oblivious, yet nervous about this mammoth apparition.

My attention is drawn away from it for a second as Delhi lights up again – the city always comes back to life after a power cut like this, it returns  like fire, tiny incendiary moments inside the myriad windows of   thousands of towering monuments to high-rise living, the high and the mighty above the despair and dirt on the streets. Phut! they come back on, Phut! Phut! Phut! – one after the other families see the light of the 21st century again … phut! Banks of street lights, the dark ages are banished for another couple of hours Phut! greasy cafes, Phut! Phut! Phut! commerce comes back on line. The golden office block might glow  dimmer but once again Delhi is a real festival of light.

And the elephant is gone.

I turn to the driver: “Did you see the elephant? Where did it go?”

This time he doesn’t look back at me, just says quietly: “I have  one eye sir, I see only what I see.”

He sounds as ancient as the hills.

delhi

August 1947, Delhi

The partition of India and Pakistan is rushed through. The malaria sky is filled with booms, then bangs and flashes, silvers from the barrel of a  gun, violent ends to lives that nobody cares about anyway. This is murder and horror. Connaught Place disappears under riots and refugees.

Delhi has the biggest refugee camps the world’s ever seen,  conservative estimates say that at least 12 million people have been made homeless almost overnight, thousands crowd the Delhi Rail station trying to catch a ride to the South.

More than a million Indians are dead in the streets.

British interference in the world is at its worst.   Viceroy Lord Mountbatten of Burma has reduced the partition process to a   shambles and, while he’s doing it  his wife, Edwina, is having a ‘holiday’ romance with  India’s new  prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru.

Everything is chaos and new frontiers like these always attract Men like John Mackenzie Cameron.  John Mackenzie Cameron a dealer of indeterminate age with a frankly-I-don’t-give-a-damn moustache and a diamond as big as a shoe. He was a mad dog in any midday sun.

John Mackenzie Cameron dealt opium and cheap  Stag whiskey to the new colonials and they  loved him for it. And his devil-may-care black patch he wore to hide his empty eye socket. He lived in the   dusty decaying suburb of Karol Bargh with a young prostitute of questionable gender. All night long mad dogs and rabid bats battered against his windows and gates, But he didn’t care, he revelled in the mud and  the dust and the blood and the beer.

His  dented old Buick 6, flying   skull and crossbones on its wings, was driven by Usef, a diminutive Bengali whom, it is said, he beat with a silver topped  cane. However, Usef took Cameron to the places he needed to go, places few white men would ever visit. In Delhi, way back then,  that was where the deals were made, in the shadow of a dancing bear or under the wings of a flying god.

John Mackenzie Cameron was a thoroughly bad lot much needed by his  ex-patriot peers. Oh, and how they must have laughed and raised a glass to his last known act on this earth.  And that was to hang an Indian elephant by the neck until it died.

This is how it happened.

In 1947 the road along side  Karol Bargh was only slightly worse than it is  today. Of course there was no pock-marked multi-lane highway, back then it was a dirt road as bad  as the face of the moon. The dust at night   was thicker than London smog.

The lights on the old battered Buick 6 had failed long ago  but Usef drove at break-neck speed through the gloom   with his master bouncing and raging in the back seat waving his silver topped cane around and making incoherent threats against the night. In this land of fatalism Usef and his master were an accident waiting to happen. And it did.

Something shimmered ahead, as if not quite formed…

… the Buick 6 smashed into the elephant’s   legs like a giant axe smashing into the trunk of an old oak tree. The  elephant bellowed in pain.

Then in a split second of self-preservation and  rage the creature reached down  with its trunk into the car and hauled the driver twenty feet into the air before dashing him down into the dust. Usef’s head burst like a blood-red water melon across the road.

But because   its legs were shattered this  beautiful,  massive sensiant creature crumpled – its great gnarled knees crashed down onto the bonnet of the Buick, its grand and powerful head smashed the windscreen to smithereens and its massive trunk lashed      the interior.

John Macenzie Cameron  launched himself out of the vehicle into the dirt where he lay  as the creature let out a   breath as hot as   steam. Its   eyes   locked on the terrified man’s  one bloodshot orb.   He knew at that moment that he had to remove his car from the scene. And he also knew this elephant would never forget him.

When the sun began to rise behind the dust the very next morning there wasn’t a telltale sign of John McEnzie Cameron or his wrecked Buick 6, it was gone. And Usef’s   life-blood had all but blown away in the warm winds of the night.

***

As the day became alive the tortured, the dispossessed, the refugees and even the colonialists stood together in silent awe. People   traipsed from the centre of Delhi to stand before this  horror.

The injured elephant had been hanged by the kneck  from a rusting old derrick car which   had been  driven   from the   railway sidings across the road. It’s  neck was stretched like leather and its trunk hung impotently. The animal looked for all the world like a child’s knitted toy hanging from the hook on a door. But its eyes were still open …

***

After this story had been related to me by an old chap in a former  gentleman’s club, now a cheap strip joint down an alley off Connaught Place, I went back to New Delhi rail station to see if I could find that ancient  tuk-tuk driver with the  perfect English accent.

But it was bound to be an impossible task … hundreds, maybe thousands of tuk-tuks were scurrying around like busy green ants. The mysterious driver with one eye might as well have never existed.