| PART
ONE: BRUNEI BOUND
It
was a spectacular late Autumn day to arrive in England en route
to the Antipodes, even better calling in at Fontwell Park in colouful
leafy Sussex which produced three wins and a second place to top
up the holiday fund.
The
16 hour flight to Brunei had already extended to 23 hours, a late
departure of two hours and a double whammy of takeoffs and landings
at Abu Dhabi didn't help either and that was just the nerves.
The
stopover in the Emirates increased to four hours, from one and a
half, but finally the cockpit computer problem had been rectified.
No
Prayer
 |
| Houses
built on stilts on top of the Brunei River |
Now
the real concern, the prayer given out and available to everyone
on the big screen and offered after every takeoff by Royal Brunei
had on this second takeoff been forgotten.
Fortunately
the remaining flight once airborne was as smooth and pleasant as
the earlier leg from London and by mid afternoon on whatever day,
maybe the following one, we were safely touching down 250 miles
north of the equator in a very sultry temperature at Brunei on the
island of Borneo.
Social
Paradise
Brunei is run
competely by the Sultan, he heads the government and his royal departments,
but nobody in their right minds would run off to the equivalent
of the European Court of Appeal when the locals pay no tax, have
100% school and University fees accomodated, enjoy lavish new shopping
facilities in the capital Bandar, a town of about 40,000 built either
side of the Brunei River.
In addition
most of the 3 lane highways were empty, apart from the school run
when many gleaming 4 wheel drives appeared, the cost of petrol (it
is an oil producing country) translated into 15p a litre, all bus
journeys were set at 1$ Brunei, about 30p, and a visit to the doctor
worked out also at 30p in our money.
Now if those
of you who rushed into Jersey in the early 70's boom are contemplating
another move across the globe as Jersey runs out of dosh, here's
the bad news.
Brunei has an
18 year housing qualification period backed up by tight work permits
which have been in force for many years, prospective emloyers are
responsible too for housing immigrants.
The result,
a population maintained at 330,000, and benefitting from very good
social welfare, zilch gaffitti, and a very secure main town even
at nightime.
Alone
in the park
So
in this social paradise on the following day I decided to take a
number 55 bus to Jerudong Park, about an hour out of town (fare30p)
through the semi-bush suburban region.
 |
| Richard
Collinson standing at the foot of a Bridge in the Brunei Rainforest |
I left
the bus at Jerudong discovering an enormous shining new multi million
dollar theme park, fountains everywhere,but wait, just a couple
of things missing, that's people and activity!
I was totally
alone with just the sound of the many spectacular fountains for
company and the searing humidity.
After discovering
the complex opens only evenings and weekends and having conducted
my own tour around the park which is close to the ocean, the next
hurdle was to find a bus stop and even more hopefully a bus back
to Bandar.
Outside the
ornate mosque seemed a good bet, pilgrims would need transport I
suspected and as if on the magic call "abacadabara" around
the corner came an empty number 55.
I needn't have
waved my body around like some paranoid whirling dervish, the bus
was slowing anyway. I eagerly paid my Brunei Dollar and enjoyed
the hour's journey back into the town.
Ramadhan
With
Ramadhan in full swing no one is eating between 8AM and 5PM, the
fasting period its an extremely quiet period but a good time to
be visiting Brunei with restaurants offering four course meals at
"Fiverfeste" prices.
The
following day however was going to be much more adventurous as I
travelled way up the muddy Brunei river, up country and right into
the heart of the rainforest, I'll bring you more of that in chapter
two.
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story
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like the story above. Email jersey@bbc.co.uk
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