The final Gibraltar post. I hope.
(click here for part 1)
This morning I went to court wearing my best shirt, smart shoes and a suit. After waiting around for a few hours I finally got some answers and to my relief the case was dropped completely. No fines to pay & I AM FREE.
...What actually happened remains vague at best.
What the police report said: 7A.M. They were called to the address 7 Calle Italia by the man who lives there. He had walked into his bedroom and found me asleep in the bed. The police woke me. I did not want to leave. There was no sign of a forced entry. It is unknown to all involved how I came to be there.
What Sunil -- The Boss of Celebrity -- said: Himself, his friend Alan and I were at The Diner, he had a ham and cheese toastie then he and Alan went back to Gibralatar as I began walking home.
What I know: I finished work at 6A.M. I had a couple of whiskey-cokes, went to The Diner and the next thing I can recall is being in the police station being asked questions and asked to sign papers.
What makes this all so strange is that the house I allegedly 'trespassed' in was only a few doors down from my own address. I lived at 19 Calle Italia, the address where the police report identifies me as being asleep was 7 Calle Italia.
[Since taking photos I discovered that 7 Calle Italia does not exist... number 5 is adjacent to 9!!]
If anyone can make heads or tales of that then please let me know. I lay the blame, as ever, on Masonic Voodoo.
Free Blog Directory
You will know when it exists -- Obscure journalism direct from our man on the ground.
Monday, 29 October 2012
Sunday, 28 October 2012
The Curse of Gibraltar - Jailed for crimes unknown
Flight back to London booked for Tuesday 30th
October. The earliest one I could afford.
I just want to get out, to get away…
…But nothing’s ever easy.
This cursed place has tried and will try again to drag
me down.
This emergency report for NecessCity is
coming to you direct from Christopher Gj Cooley, straight out the pen.
Friday
26th October 2012
I started work at Celebrity Wine Bar at
11P.M. It was a Halloween costume party, a band called Jet Stream played a very
long set. It was busy. The glass washer was broken. It was chaos.
When the shift ended at 6 A.M. I felt like
relaxing. I had two whiskey-cokes and then left with The Boss and his
associate. The last thing I remember is being at a roadside restaurant ordering
food. After that I draw a complete blank, until: I’m in a Spanish fucking
prison. They are asking me questions; I can’t remember what they said, or what
I said. All I remember is that I wouldn’t sign any of the
pieces of paper they put in front of me. Then I am taken to a cell. The
seriousness of the situation begins to dawn upon me. Where is my lawyer? Can I
have some water? What have I done wrong? Sheer confusion, panic and shock.
It is all a mystery when you are alone in
The Cell. Conspiracy theories circulate your head. Did they take your shoelaces
just to put the thought of hanging yourself into your head?
Why can’t I remember anything? I had only
had a couple of drinks surely that would not have made me black-out. How long
will I be in this prison? It is all very weird in here. A door made of metal
bars. Tiled walls. Tiled floor. No window. No sense of time. On the white roof
somebody has burnt the words ‘No no’ – one last-ditch attempt to communicate.
Before The End. Before the feds come in and club you to death, just for fun.
To stay sane and remain calm I try to keep
my sense of humour, but it is a task to laugh at the situation. The Messiah of
all failures: Dear Grandparents, Mum, Dad, brothers and sisters “How did I
start my career after university?” Imprisonment in Spain. Ha Ha, but it could
all be too real. Yes you are in a jail but how is that funny? This is no joke.
It could be horribly serious.
After a few hours in The Cell I’m taken to
a room where a photographer tries to take my photo but for some reason he can’t
seem to get the settings right on the camera and it takes him maybe 15 minutes.
Then every single one of my fingerprints is taken. My hands black with ink.
Then back to The Cell. I can’t sleep: too
anxious. I attempt to sing ‘Spancil Hill’ but in my distraught state I can’t
remember the lyrics. Some time later I’m given ‘Fabada’: a plate of beans with two bits of black sausage and one
bit of pasta floating in it. And three packets of crackers. I would have
preferred a cigarette. The strange paranoia I was feeling drove me to roll up
the packaging of these foul tasting foods and stash them in my sock.
Prison food. |
I tried to sleep again but I couldn’t. I
just lay there, trying to remember anything. Trying to make some sort of sense.
I decide the only explanation can be that somebody drugged me. But why?
I bang on the bars and ask to go to the
toilet. The toilet has a window and I see it is sunny outside.
Finally a lawyer arrives along with a
translator. They ask me what happened.
“I finished work, went with my boss to a
restaurant, then when I was walking home I was arrested.” I say, as a police
officer stares at me over the desk.
“And you remember everything?” Asks the
translator.
“Yes.” I lie, instinctively.
“Why am I here?” I ask.
“You were in a house that is not yours.”
The translator tells me.
I am asked to sign some papers, this time
they are translated and describe a court date on Monday. Suspicious terror
leads me to sign them with a newly invented signature.
Then I am handed my possessions in a brown
envelope: shoelaces, belt, passport, keys, a £10 note, a lighter and a packet
of Marlboro gold. I am told I can leave. There are three doors and I am
completely disoriented. I pick one and walk towards it until they tell me the
exit is the opposite door.
Freedom. Walking the streets, the sickening
taste of jail-beans haunting your mouth. The wind blows heavy and you debate
with yourself whether to stop and lace your shoes or just keep going.
And you debate going to court. You could
flee.
You should have asked the lawyer what the
charges were. Asked her what the possible sentences might be. The best you can
hope for is an incremental fine. Hopefully some clarity.
Court date. |
.
Location:
Campo de Gibraltar, Spain
Wednesday, 24 October 2012
Down and Out at The End of Europe - A budding journalist discouraged by The Gibraltar Magazine
Gibraltar. Many call it the arse end of Spain. After two weeks living here I consider that flattery. It’s more like the rectal passage of a constipated Europe, clogged with a crooked turd that has been stinging the asshole of Spain for hundreds of years.
What brought me to such a foul
location?
… A journalism job beckoned.
Camp Bay, Gibraltar |
Tuesday 25th of September 2012
I’ve weighed my suitcase (23kg) and
paid for the extra weight online. My alarm wakes me at 3am. I kiss my
girl for the last time. Two buses get me to the airport, where
Monarch airlines tell me my bag weighs 28kg and charge me another
£50. I should have expected this sort of treatment from a company
called Monarch.
I arrive in Gibraltar at 11am, get a
bus to Casemates square and walk to La Bayuca: the office of The
Gibraltar Magazine. I say hello to Andrea (The Publisher), her
Chihuahuas, the cat and the kittens.
Then I go to the recently inaugurated,
faux-Caribbean marina, Ocean Village and visit all the bars. Not
boozing. Asking for weekend work to supplement the 20 hours a week
promised by the magazine. There seems to be a demand for
weekend-staff but each establishment wants a printed CV.
Back at the office Andrea asks where I
am staying.
“Over the border in La Linea, with
some Scottish guy that answered my request on CouchSurfing.Org. I’m
a bit worried because I’ve never CouchSurfed before and this guy
has the same name as a famous folk singer. But I have faith in the
goodness of the human race… and I like his songs.” I say as I
empty the various cables and electronic equipment from my rucksack
and fill it with some essential clothing.
Andrea looks worried and says, “I
wouldn’t trust anybody I didn’t know if I were you. Give me your
Mum’s mobile number so I can tell her that Spanish gypsies have
murdered you and removed your kidneys and eyes to sell on the black
market.”
“Don’t put thoughts like that into
my head. I’ll be fine. Anyway he spells Euan differently to the
folk singer, and he sounds decent. Here read his message.” I say
whilst getting the CouchSurfing conversation up on one of the office
computers.
Andrea’s comments become slightly
more positive “Well he does say I stay with my father rather
than I live with my father, that’s very Scottish. So at
least he’s not a Spanish gypsy.
No answer when I call his mobile
though. I buzz the flat. No answer. I walk around and see a bike
shop. I go in and ask if they have any cheap second hand racers. I am
told to come back tomorrow. I go and wait on the fly ridden benches
besides the bullring until the working day is done.
A large man wearing glasses and a
checked shirt answers the door. His name is Laurence: Euan’s
father. He tells me to grab a beer from the fridge and puts on ‘Line of Sight’ a movie filmed by madcap bicycle messengers who
are also the subject matter. Euan (a tall lad in his early twenties)
arrives home with a friend from work and Laurence cooks us all
dinner, which we eat listening to The Ramones.
As the evening progresses and more
beers are drunk an occasional paranoid thought runs through my head:
Are treating me to free food and beer for the purpose of stealing my
organs? I share with them what Andrea said. It’s slightly awkward
but not in the scheme of things. Before long I am having a real good
time chatting away. Eventually I go to bed in the spare room and the
paranoia returns, but only mildly. I fall asleep and wake up again
the next morning fully intact.
La Bayuca, head office of The Gibraltar Magazine |
Wednesday 26th
September 2012
The walk into Gibraltar and across the
runway is a drag in the rain. At La Bayuca they are surprised to see
me alive. I borrow an umbrella, print some CVs and hand them out at
Ocean Village.
Spain. 5pm. Using a tourist map I
manage to navigate my way through the residential maze of La Linea to
the address of a flat I have arranged a viewing for. I wait for
Carlos the estate agent. I am early. He is exactly on time. The
landlady is inside smoking and doing some last minute cleaning. I
like the flat and plans are made to draw up the contract tomorrow.
Later, at the bike shop the second hand racer has arrived and costs
me €30. Good. Plus the rain has stopped.
I return to The Scots’ house and give
Laurence the latest (unreleased) copy of The Gibraltar Magazine,
flicking through to an article on e-gaming (online gambling), one of
Gibraltar’s largest industries. Laurence works in online security
at William Hill. I ask him about the social implications and
ramifications of this industry.
Laurence is keen to inform me about the
subject at length “It’s a relatively new industry, and it’s
growing at an astonishing rate. Until recently people would go to a
bingo hall on a Sunday afternoon. The Internet has changed
everything. Now those people can play bingo on their mobile phone 24
hours a day. Nobody’s seen anything like this before. I’m sure it
will mess a lot of people up, but the industry makes too much money
to have to worry about the ramifications… And the governments love
it. Of course they do: it’s taxable.”
The talk then turns to the EU economy
and Laurence says, “Europe is crumbling around the edges.
Everything might seem fine in Berlin or Brussels but there were riots
in Madrid and Greece today... Italy tomorrow.” He tilts his head to
the side in a gesture of knowing. “On the outer limits, on the
fringes you can see it, it’s obvious. Like here in La Linea, it’s
crumbling before your eyes.” He lights a cigarette and a licks his
lips.
I say I have heard that the Police
force in La Linea hasn’t been paid for over three months.
“Aye, some people ‘round here
haven’t been paid for a year”
“So how do they survive?”
“Borrow from friends I suppose. Make
do.”
The talk continues along a political
vein as we turn to red wine for solace. As the Tinto flows
Laurence gets evermore riled up “Capitalism’s fucked. It’s
clearly not working but nobody’s got any better ideas.”
I ask him if he used to be a member of
The Co-operative. He asks me how I knew that. I tell him that my
dissertation was on the subject and that I know it was an institution
in Scotland. He says it used to be known simply as ‘The Store’ -
it was that ubiquitous.
My phone rings. The boss of Celebrity
Wine Bar wants to meet me tomorrow at 8pm.
The conversation turns to protests. I
explain what I have witnessed personally over the last few years in
London:
- The ‘Peace Village’ on Parliament Square where I interviewed some protestors before they were evicted.
- The riots in the summer of 2011 when, from the window of my flat, I saw a group of youths smash their way into Jessops and steal a few cameras (New Scotland Yard was less than 200 yards away).
- The Occupy Movement outside St Paul’s Cathedral with its makeshift library that taught me more about politics by default than college.
- And finally the mass student marches that I was a part of until realising they were futile.
I recall, “I wasn’t part of the
last student march, I knew by then that the government weren’t
listening, but I went down to Parliament Square and watched from
behind the Police lines. I saw the Constabulary’s horses charge
into the cold, kettled protestors, who by that point just wanted to
go home.”
“Aye” Laurence agreed, “Peaceful
protests will do fuck all. Those in power will do anything they can
to stay in power. They always have done. Look at Gibraltar: it’s
run by Freemasons and The Royals and it’s totally corrupt.”
The conversation moved to what’s been
happening across North Africa and the Arabic world, and how Europe is
not so far from reaching a similar fate. One phrase repeatedly turned
to was ‘Armed Insurrection.’
Say it with a Scottish accent.
“Armed Insurrection.”
Catchy.
It wasn’t long ago that Spain was a
dictatorship. In a volatile world who’s to say when the next big
political shift will be?
Euan arrives home
and tells me more about the work he does for Pokerstrategy.com – it
sounds like Gibraltar is a breeding ground for professional gamblers.
Before long we all cycle down to get some tapas from Patagonica, a
small Argentinian steak counter. Each plate costs around €3 and is
served with a baked potato. After a few Canjas I’m ready to
speak some Spanish and I want some butter.
“?Tienes
mantiquilla por favor?”
Thursday 27th
September 2012
In the morning the house is empty.
Strange sentences circulate my mind. I climb through the shower and
back into reality.
I go to the main street of La Linea to
get the dinero to give to Carlos. Each and every ATM I go to
has insufficient funds for the €350 deposit, let alone enough to
withdraw a month’s rent in advance and the estate agent’s
commission. Eventually, after trying about six different banks I find
one that has enough cash for the deposit. The landlord is at the
estate agents office and - once the contract has been put through
Google translate - we both sign it and I get the keys. (If only it
could be that easy in London!)
After dumping my backpack and buying
water I cycle into Gibraltar to meet the manager of Celebrity Wine
Bar. The meeting is short, he says come to work tomorrow at 8pm.
Cycling back is fun. The roads are wet allowing for some controlled
skids on the racing bike’s skinny tyres. A line of cars has been
snaking all the way around Gibraltar at a standstill for the last
three hours making it even more satisfying: pedaling fast down the
middle of a traffic jam.
I move the furniture around to make my
flat feel less like a motel. I put the fridge in the living room. I
notice there are no bed sheets (my sleeping bag is still in my
suitcase at the office).
I take off my leather brogues and see
that my toes are all bleeding because I have been constantly moving
the last few days.
I am forced to use a curtain as a
blanket.
Unfinished mural, La Linea |
Friday 28th
September 2012
Today I begin work for The Gibraltar
Magazine.
It’s 7.30am and it’s raining hard.
The cycle into Gibraltar is invigorating but by the time I get there
I am sodden. I leave the bike outside The Lord Nelson. I am early and
have to wait under a balcony until Andrea arrives.
I am told to go and meet Jolene (the
company’s only other employee) who is driving a hire-van. The rain
is coming down in sheets and I can hardly see, it is so bad that by
the time I get to the meeting point the van has gone. I phone Jolene,
get to the next meeting point, and for the next five hours drive
around delivering stacks of the latest edition to all the
establishments that will take it: car dealerships, cafes,
restaurants, pubs, industrial parks, builders merchants, hotels,
retirement homes, offices, paint shops.
Once we have finished we take all the
empty cardboard boxes to a tunnel full of wheelie-bins. I ask Jolene
if there is anywhere we could recycle them.
She says “No, it’s not good here
like the UK for that.”
A brief glance around the dumpsters and
I see heaps and heaps of discarded cigarette boxes. I think back to
something Andrea previously told me.
With a certain fondness of tone she had
said, “Gibraltar is twenty years behind the UK.”
I had taken it as mere affection for
Gib’s idiosyncrasies but now it struck me as something that
shouldn’t be shrugged off as a slightly backwards quirkiness. Sure
it might be cute that there are no Starbucks and people still wear
shell-suits, but a European country having no infrastructure for
recycling in 2012 is shameful.
The downpour had dwindled in the early
afternoon but after dumping the trash and getting back to the office
it started raining crazy-heavy. The newspaper ‘Sur in English’
later reported that the ‘culprit’ of this torrential downpour -
that caused catastrophic flooding throughout AndalucÃa - was ‘the
typically Mediterranean meteorological phenomenon known as the ‘gota
fria’ or ‘cold drop’; temperatures plunged and the heavens
opened’
At the time, trapped in the office, I
just wanted to get my belongings back to my flat so that I could get
settled over the weekend.
Thunder and lightning kicked in and one
of the Chihuahuas started shaking frantically like a Polaroid
picture of a puppy with Parkinson’s. After about half an
hour the rain abated.
“OK. See you at nine on Monday then.”
says Andrea with a wave.
Just as I reach the shelter of the bus
station the torrential rain begins again. After getting the bus to
the Frontier I load my things into a Spanish taxi.
The courtyard of my new flat has become
a paddling pool. If it rises another inch it will seep under my front
door. I need to get to the supermarket; the cupboards are bare, and I
need to eat before my first shift at the Celebrity Wine Bar.
I’m wet enough as it is, so I walk
out in my plimpsols and a ‘splash proof’ jacket. The Flood has
come! The water reaches the sewer’s brink and the drains spew
scores of cockroaches. They may be able to survive nuclear holocaust
but nothing survives The Flood!
The roads are filling up like blocked
urinals on a Saturday night: the water already above ankle level.
When I get to the supermarket I am wetter than a snowman in July. I
don’t own any pots or pans so I get a pizza. On my way back I pick
up the umbrella that I left at Laurence’s house.
I warm up in the shower, dry off and
dress in black. The monsoon stops as I eat dinner. Most of the water
has drained away by the time I walk into Gibraltar. I move my bike
from The Lord Nelson before it gets drunk and rowdy.
8pm. Celebrity Wine Bar. The bar staff
ballet: pirouetting and pouring until 4am. Sure enough nothing is
recycled. Aluminum cans, glass bottles and cardboard boxes are all
thrown away in the same bag. Around 11pm it got very busy and the air
was thick with smoke. This is the last weekend before Gibraltar
finally introduces a smoking ban for enclosed public spaces.
I smoke a few cigarettes myself before
leaving and one of the Spanish barmaids (who had been squeezing my
biceps as we worked) tells me “You work nice.”
I cycle home happily along empty
streets and sleep in my sleeping bag: no more curtains for me.
Refuse tunnel, Chatham Countergaurd |
The Gibraltar Magazine's favourite dumping ground. |
Selection of newspaper articles about The Flood. |
Saturday 29th September 2012
First I rest. Then I buy essentials
from one of the Chinese Bazaars that have just about every household
product you could ever need.
I get a pot, a pan, an espresso maker,
a rope, some sponges, a light-bulb, nail clippers, a chopping board,
electrical adapters and laundry detergent.
-- If they don’t have it, you don’t
get it –
I manage to withdraw the rest of the
money to pay for the flat.
Chinese pan. |
Neighbour's ganja plantation. |
View of The Rock from my roof |
Sunday 30th
September 2012
After stocking the cupboards and doing
the household chores I cycle to Santa Margarita the nearest village.
After the short trip eyes feel grimey and my wind-pipe feels narrow.
If you look down the coast towards the
Algeciras you see industrial chimneys spouting plumes that rise
slowly into the atmosphere. Laurence reassures me air-quality tests
have been done and pollution levels are not particularly high - what
they did find though was floating particles of sand that get blown
across the strait from the Sahara. Solemnly he foresees that
AndalucÃa will be a desert itself within 100 years.
In the evening - as I am making a ‘to
do’ list - I realise that the battery in my phone has run out. I
must have left the charger at The Gibraltar Magazine in the confusion
of The Flood. I have no other form of alarm. All I can do is go to
bed and hope I wake up in time for my first day at the office.
Monday 1st
October 2012
Despite my best efforts I arrive at
work at 10am.
“Hello. What’s up?” I inquire
cheerfully as I walk through the door.
I am greeted with silence and a
scornful look from Andrea…
I say “I’m sorry that I’m late
but the battery on my phone ran out so I didn’t have an alarm – I
left my phone charger here on Friday.”
As she becomes more vocal she remains
scornful. She does not except my excuse as valid. I say I know it
doesn’t look good that I am late on my second day but ask her to
make some allowances seeing that I arrived less than a week ago and
only moved in to my flat a few days ago. I tell her this would never
happen usually, it has just been chaotic getting settled in so
quickly.
“Your personal life is none of my
concern Chris. All I am concerned about is running this magazine.”
She goes on to say she was not at all
impressed that my first words weren’t ‘sorry’ but instead were
‘what’s up?’
Silence.
Eventually she says she is seriously
considering not employing me. She gives me an official warning.
Strike one. Again I apologise and assure her it won’t happen again.
But her tirade doesn’t let up.
“If I were you I’d have come in on
my knees this morning groveling to keep my job.”
Silence.
Eventually she gives me a task: To
compose a template e-mail which I will then use to contact potential
advertisers for Yacht Scene Gibraltar 2013 - a sailor’s guide to
the surrounding area and directory of services available in
Gibraltar.
At 2pm I leave the office and queue for
over half an hour to buy a Gibraltar sim card. When I get home my
nose starts bleeding. I walk into La Linea town center and see a
Language school. I enquire about Spanish lessons. They say they are
going to run some… when they have enough people interested.
I go and pay the estate agent the rent
and his commission. I greet him with “Buenos tardes” which
he seems to appreciate. I borrow a tape measure from Laurence,
measure my bed, buy some bed sheets and a pillow, charge my phone,
set my alarm and go to sleep.
Tuesday 2nd October 2012
I get to work super early and wait.
After taking the Chihuahuas out of her
bag Andrea gets right down to it.
“So, I was going to sign your
contract first thing yesterday but… well, you weren’t there. I’m
afraid you just aren’t right for this job Chris.”
I am shocked, what is she telling me?
“You said yesterday that you were giving me an official warning.”
I reply.
Andrea stares at me through her cold
grey eyes “Last night I talked to the other employees and we all
agreed that you are clearly unreliable. So, now that I have slept on
it I’ve decided that I can’t offer you a contract.”
I begin to plead, “I moved here from
England to work for this magazine, I think that shows a lot of
commitment… And your job description said ‘flexible hours’.”
“Flexible hours does not mean turning
up at ten when we agreed on nine... I just don’t think I can trust
you enough to fill in the official papers. I’ll pay you in cash for
Friday, yesterday and today.” Andrea says, as if she is being
generous.
My heart is sinking with the
recognition of what this means, “I just signed a six month contract
on a flat. What am I supposed to do now?”
She thinks briefly then says “Well
you could go to the tax office and register as self-employed. If you
do that then I might be able to give you some work as a freelancer.”
All right I say and walk out. I apply
for self-employed status by 11am, the precise time I arrived exactly
one week ago.
Opposite the tax office I find John
Mackintosh Hall: a public library with computers. I get on the
Internet and start working on plan B.
In the evening I get DRUNK.
Cycling around in an inebriated state I
quickly become lost. The streets of La Linea are complicated enough
when walking sober. When riding you find that the one-way system
prevalent on nearly every road leads you on an perplexing spiral
through a labyrinth worthy of Jorge Luis
Borges.
When I finally find my street I view
the elapsed hours that it took me to find my way as a metaphor for my
life: Unexpectedly adrift, directionless, wasted.
Wednesday 3rd
October 2012
Numerous people that I re-told the
firing incident to suggest that Andrea may have jumped at an excuse
to save money and not employ me with a fixed hour contract. My Father
suggests I go see a lawyer and try to get some compensation.
I go to Stephen L. ffrench Davis
BARRISTER AT LAW Acting solicitor & Comm. For Oaths. His chambers
are a house with a kitchen and a Labrador. He sits upright in the
study. A pre-rolled cigarette sits incongruously on the desk. We
shake hands.
“I think I have been unfairly
dismissed from a job. Is there any chance I could get some
compensation?” I inquire.
In a smooth English accent he asks me
to give him the whole story, from the beginning:
Well “I e-mailed The Gibraltar
Magazine speculatively asking if they had any work. They told me they
did have a job available. 20 hours a week, £8 an hour, working
flexible hours.
They said they liked my CV but would
have to meet me before offering me the job. I flew out for a week in
late August with my girlfriend. I did a couple of hours work as a
trial. The Publisher gave me the job and told me I could start as
soon as I moved out here.
A month later I arrived...”
[I continue to explain the last week to
the solicitor]
“So did they e-mail you saying that
you had the job?” asks Stephen L. ffrench Davis.
“No. I was told in person.” I
answer, feeling slightly embarrassed at my own naivety.
He shakes his head, “Well you know
what they say about verbal contracts… they aren’t worth the paper
they are printed on.”
He asks if the publisher is called
Andrea. I nod.
“Yes from what I’ve heard she can
be very tricky.” He says in manner that brings to mind
Sherlock Holmes.
He informs me there is no use pursuing
this legally because I have no statutory rights to stand on. The only
way to do it would be to take it to the Supreme Court and that would
mean a lot of legal costs, and if I were to loose the case I would
end up having to pay the defendants costs as well.
He advises me against freelancing for
The Gibraltar Magazine. “You don’t want to start your career like
that” he says and phones the Gibraltar Broadcasting Company asking
for the head of personnel. He writes the name and number on the back
of his business card.
He clearly believes an injustice has
been done and is trying to do all he can to put it right. One of the
good guys. If you are ever in Gibraltar and need a lawyer – which I
pray you never are – then go and see this man.
“Thanks for being so decent to me”
I say as I am walking out.
“I assume you travel light?” he
asks.
“I have one large suitcase and a
backpack.”
“Well you can always just leave and
put this week down as expenses.”
I wish it was that easy Stephen, but
I’ve got a goddamn contract on an apartment and I’m flat out
broke. Oh well ‘What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger!’
On the way out of Gibraltar the roads
are blocked again. The police have set up cones and are directing
traffic to form a long queue circling all the available roundabouts.
It poses no logistical problem for cyclists - you just ride in
between the stationary motor-vehicles – but, as you cleanly
circumvent the pile-up, inhaling the fumes of a thousand exhausts is
unavoidable.
Thursday 4th
October 2012
I am falling into a daily routine. I
pass the Gibraltar Regiment Guard stationed outside the Governor’s
Residence and warily eye the blade of their bayoneted rifle. I get to
the sanctity of John Mackintosh Hall and apply for jobs. No responses
yet, only a heartbreaking message from my EX-girlfriend. I don’t
know why it didn’t sink in before that things between us could
never be the same. (Since) I did leave her for the filth-ridden
destitution of the impoverished Spanish frontier.
The roads are blocked again for hours
in the late afternoon. Only on foot or on bike can get you get out of
Gibraltar without having to wait for literally hours.
In the evening I
work on the script for a video-essay I am producing about illegal
boathouses in Malta. Later I go out drinking in La Linea. On
the way home my bike’s front tyre pops.
Friday 5th
October 2012
After wheeling my bike into the shop
where bought it and asking them to fix it, I follow my daily routine.
In the evening it is back to work at
Celebrity Wine Bar. It is not so busy as last weekend, possibly
because the smoking ban has come into effect, which gives me a chance
to observe the clientele: tattooed ape-men with vacant eyes, their
tongues falling out, dance around swinging loose arms and punch-drunk
eyes. God knows what sort of powders they have taken, I’ve never
seen ‘dancing’ like it. They constantly punch, bear-hug or sit on
one another. Their mullets and attempts at play-fighting make the
straighter-laced customers visibly nervous. All the while their
mouths hang open with cumbersome tongues protruding. The women seem
to find this behavior digestible. I - on the other hand - try to
avoid any eye contact.
Shop front, Main Street |
Saturday
5th October 2012
The sun has returned and the AndalucÃan
heat is touching 30C. A grim smell of sewage wafts through the forlorn streets.
The decrepit pavements are pocked with mounds of doggy-doo. In La Linea you
have to dodge a crap every couple of yards while flies land on your eyelashes.
In the evening I sat drinking beers at The
Soviet Bar with Mario a local postman. He spoke little English, I spoke little
Spanish, but we managed to converse on the subjects such of Politics and Art.
He spoke to me of the Franco era, of AndalucÃa’s current level of unemployment
(around 33%) and of Dali and Picasso; how they were forward thinkers beyond
what lesser artists could have imagined, and how the world is at a point where
it could use really use some contemporary forward thinkers.
Sunday
6th October 2012
My throat starts to feel tight and I find
it hard to swallow. I worry my breathing will be effected but so far it only
appears to be causing me psychological distress. I imagine an invisible hand
squeezing my gullet.
I walk to the bus station and pick up a
free newspaper: the Euro Weekly News. On the beach, trying to read it, I get
covered in flies and can’t concentrate. The air on the Playa de Poniente smells contaminated, there is some sort of
drainage outlet in the middle and the sand is littered with rubbish and
cigarette butts.
I go home and spend the day finalising my
Malta film. All it needs now is for the narrator to record his voiceover and it
will be finished. [Coming soon]. (COME)
Monday
8th October 2012
Picked up my bike with its new front tyre
(cost (€18).
Using the computers at The John Mackintosh
Hall I apply to work for the Euro Weekly News. A family of Barbary Apes scales
the walls of the Trafalgar Cemetery.
My throat is still constricting. Could be
something to do with my neck, from cycling or from sleeping funny or too much
smoking? Maybe a virus, the low air quality, or some sort of Masonic Voodoo? I
don’t know what the hell it is but it is freaking me out. All I can do is
christen the disorder ‘Sahara Lung’.
I begin to grasp the fact that the traffic
jams originating at the border are an everyday occurrence. I ask around as to
what’s causing these daily delays: It seems cigarettes are so cut-rate that
Spanish customs and excise officers have to check almost every vehicle to ebb
the flow of illegal cigarettes being run into Spain. Plus the low price of
petrol brings in extra vehicles that come for the sole purpose of filling their
tanks with cheap fuel.
Statue commemorating cycling workers, La Linea. |
Tuesday
9th October 2012
The sun was high and bright over Campo De
Gibraltar but a solitary cloud embraced the east side of The Rock. I took
photos at the deserted Eastern beach. Long air-horn blasts interrupt the
silence as Cargo ships announce themselves in the mist. I also took photos of
the daily backlog of drivers trying to get out of Gib.
Wednesday
10th October 2012
The tail-less monkeys are down in the town
again. ‘Sahara Lung’ is driving me to disturbance. I walk around holding my
neck and chest, looking at the floor.
I send a postcard to my Grandparents,
opening with “This is possibly the least positive postcard you’ll ever have
received.”
Thursday 11th October 2012
My application for Self-employment is
finally approved. I just have to pick it up and sign some papers at the
employment office located in New Harbours Industrial Estate. The road leading
in is the worst I have yet to encounter in Gibraltar, and that’s saying
something as they are all in a state of disrepair. The roads here are so bad I
can imagine they put many a budding cyclists off altogether. Cracks, raised
drains, holes, sunk drains, lumps, bumps, slopes, concrete eruptions, shattered
glass – obstacles you have to swerve to avoid. I now understand why I am one of
the few people with a racing bike. Here the sensible cyclist has suspension.
Paint and petro-chemical odors hit the back
of my throat as I enter the industrial estate. At the employment offices I’m
now told to register as self employed I have to pay £50. I decide to e-mail
Andrea and see exactly what freelance work she plans to offer me before handing
over the money.
I cycle out of New Harbours on Rosia Road
to have a look at the western beaches. They are depressing. Empty swimming
pools, empty playgrounds, and empty restaurants look out onto sand-less beaches
fronting a bay dominated by lingering cargo ships.
I continue along Keightley Way though a
dank tunnel to Europa Point. The tip of Gibraltar, the end of Europe; Tariffa
appears lower on the map but does not have the air of doomed finality required
to bear the symbolic title of ‘the end of
Europe’. Here mini-buses unload cruise ship passengers who meander around
like alienated zombies. Instead of brains they crave ice cream. Around corner
from the tourists is the Gibraltar crematorium, which at first I perceive as
being in a tasteful position. Setting the ashes of loved ones over the sea
towards North-Africa. However its neighbouring structure is a Garbage
Incineration Plant. Next door to this at a layby-cum-dump trucks offload refuse
and the stench of waste becomes overbearing.
I speed through Dudley Ward Tunnel out onto
Sir Herbert Miles Road and complete the circuit. Back in town on Main Street I
pick up a copy of the monthly tabloid newspaper ‘GibLive!’ One article strikes
me. An article praising Spain’s clampdown on cigarette smuggling but blaming
inadequacy on the part of the Spanish authorities for the daily tail-backs in
Gibraltar.
The article reads:
‘It is also
difficult to be fully supportive of these crime fighters in the wake of
two-hour queues in temperatures of 30C.
If Spain wants
support from the people of Gibraltar against this crime-wave then they must
find a way to go about their business without bringing the traffic to a
standstill.’
The solution seems very simple to me. If
Gibraltar’s government imposed a tax making cigarettes cost the same as in
Spain then smuggling would be rendered obsolete. Thus eliminating the need for
regular customs checks and consequently eliminating unnecessary fuel consumption.
Maybe the money raised from this tax could be used to resurface the roads and
instigate a system of recycling. I can’t think of any reason why something
along these lines wouldn’t be advantageous to the majority of Gibraltarians. A
few tobacconists would loose outside custom but they would still have the
native market.
Why was this solution not blatantly
apparent to the government of Gibraltar?
There was one man I knew would have the
answers.
He is sitting in the kitchen with a bald
bloke called Johnny from Leeds who is quality.
With a full glass of red wine in hand
Laurence stares at me for a moment then says bluntly “I’ve already told you
why: Gibraltar is totally corrupt.”
“I’m sorry, I get forgetful after I’ve had
a few beers” I tell him.
So Laurence elaborates “If you walk down
Main Street and look at the shop fronts you’ll see there are about four or five
recurring family names, each owning an off-license, a tobacconists, an
electrical shop etc. These families have been doing business here for years and
will all have family members in the government. Nepotism (& Freemasonry)
ensures there is no tax, so that the big merchants can make as much money out
of that little rock as possible.”
I conclude there is no doubt ‘GibLive!’ are
on the payroll– just look at the advertisers. Then I’m hit with a recollection.
Flash back to the day Andrea explained the job to me.
“We publish positive articles about all
things Gibraltar related.” She’d said.
If I hadn’t been fired you can be sure all
I’d have wrote would’ve been little more than marketing. P.R. for the greed
consortium. I knew this and I was willing to give it a go: to get hands-on
publishing experience and hone my reportage skills (whilst doing some real writing on the side). But I shan’t
fret about not working for a spineless dinosaur of a publication like The
Gibraltar Magazine.
In the words of Ella Wheeler Wilcox “To sin
by silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men.”
Article from GibLive! |
Evil dolphins, Camp Bay |
ice cream van, Little Bay |
View of Europa Point from Incineration Plant |
Kiosk for the essentials, Gibraltar |
AFTERNOTE.
Andrea has yet to reply to my e-mail asking
what sort of hours she would give me if I registered as self-employed and went
freelance for The Gibraltar Magazine.
The Sarah Lung still grips my neck but the
countdown has begun until I leave this ill-fated masonic municipality.
In the next episode my drink gets spiked and I end up in Spanish jail read about it here and finally here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)