Archive for December 2nd, 2008

Cinch

The trip from Dubai to Dhaka was a cinch after having already covered the distance between Boston and Dubai. I travelled surrounded by a large family of Bangladeshis returning from a shopping trip in Dubai. If you live in this part of the world and you have money, apparently that is where you go. The family occupied about a quarter of all the business class seats and included several fat little boys – the kind I remember from Lebanon – little princes I don’t find all that adorable but they make their moms smile no matter how obnoxious they are. At Dhaka airport the family was met by an official with an official looking tag on a lanyard around his neck. I assumed they were either related to the Emirates station manager or it was a quid pro quo for a Biman Airlines official. It was a happy crowd that walked away with the gentleman, holding hands and swinging their large and full shopping bags.

I was met before immigration by a man with two stripe epaulets who looked like an airline pilot holding a sign that said BRAC conference rather than my name. He did not speak any English of significance and so I followed him silently. He did take me right past the long line of people waiting to get their passport stamped, straight to the front of the line marked ‘crew.’ That got me into Bangladesh in no time. It was then I realized I had forgotten to tell my Bangla friends I was coming. To remedy this and to get me set up for a work related phone call tomorrow night I got myself a simcard from the money I had leftover from my last trip here, some 9 years ago, 500 Taka, which was still good money after all those years.

I met Anna who also came from the US for the conference. We will be roommates. Anna lives in DC but is a doctoral student at Harvard School of Public Health and presenting on her thesis which is about contracting for health services. We were driven to the conference center, about one hour out of Dhaka. By the time we got on the road it was 9 PM and dark and, supposedly, after rush hour (though rush enough for me).

The trip to the conference center was a little scary with most cars driving on the wrong side, which is the ride side here (left) but some driving on the wrong side for Bangladesh which would be the right side for me – I tried not to look too much at the oncoming traffic, especially when the headlights seemed to be coming straight at us. That, not bombs in hotels, is the true occupational hazard for my line of work. The driver of our little minibus was expert at swinging out of the way, sometimes off the pavement, to avoid the headlights that did not swerve back at the last minute. I gave him a heartfelt ‘donabad’ when we arrived at the center in one piece.
We were received at the center like long lost cousins, with several short men swarming around us handing us our nametags, a conference back and getting us to our rooms, then dinner. The dorms we are sleeping in are laid out around two low pools connected by a little bridge. I hope the water is treated to repel mosquitoes. I am in that part of the world and was stung already at the airport. I am glad I remembered the malaria prophylaxis although I forgot the mosquito repellent.

Our room is sparse and functional with a small desk with two chairs, two cubbyholes for our clothes and two narrow twin beds. I am back in economy class. We will be here for four nights and four days, of which this first one is a special one, my 57th birthday, on which I find myself alive and well.

Blue carpet

I learned from Dubai TV that the US is now officially in recession and caught up with the news of the day – International AIDS Day no less – from my multi-pillowed bed in a luxurious Dubai hotel, while eating complimentary chocolates and dates for breakfast.

KLM, true to its reputation, delivered me right on time to Dubai where we were welcomed by white clad men and black clad women wearing the kinds of scarves you see at soccer games in Europe, except the people pictured on the scarves were the UAE’s rulers rather than sports heroes. I arrived on their national holiday which is spread out over several days. The private sector, I learned from the newspaper has a mandated three day holiday because of this. With next week’s Eid El Adha, this makes for a very relaxed start of December if you work here.

I was chauffeured to my hotel by a Pakistani taxi driver who once lived in Cambridge with his Harvard-educated scientist wife (they divorced since). He congratulated me with my new president and showed that he followed the cabinet making closely. He thought Hillary was good a choice. He was at loss about what to make of the Mumbai massacres. The taxi driver who returned me to the airport this morning was from India. His English was not very good and he answered all my questions, including the open ended ones with a wobble of his head and a happy ‘yes Madam.’

Luck had it that the only seats available on the flight to Dhaka were business class and so I got to check out how Emirates deals with its business class passengers. The terminal has a separate entrance and a large reserved area of the terminal building for first and business class passengers that looks like the entrance of a high end luxury hotel. You really get a feel for the riches of a nation when there are more check-in counters for first class passengers alone than all the check-in counters for any airline at Logan. Between first and business class check in (red carpet and blue carpet) there were 36 counters. The business class lounge, separate from first class, is the size of the entire Logan terminal E with wireless internet, two restaurants, a cafe/snack bar, a fully stocked bar, a day spa, hotel rooms, showers, and, best of all, the most electrical outlets per square inch than I have seen anywhere else in the world. There is a separate first class lounge and I can’t imagine how that one can top this. I am enjoying the luxury while it lasts, as it will stop when I land in Dhaka tonight and return to the real world. I think I will treat myself to a glass of chilled Veuve Clicquot and a Lebanese mezze with the compliments of Emirates Airlines.


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