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THE C ORRESPONDENT THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS’ CLUB, HONG KONG MAY/JUNE 2005 THEN Sandy Burton Honoured MSF: An Unusual Life NOW and VIETNAM 30 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF SAIGON

The Correspondent, May - June 2005

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and Burton Honoured • MSF: An • Sandy Unusual Life VIETNAM 30 YEARS AFTER THE FALL OF SAIGON MAY/JUNE 2005 THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS’ CLUB, HONG KONG

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Page 1: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THECORRESPONDENTTHE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS’ CLUB, HONG KONG

MAY/JUNE 2005

THEN

• Sandy Burton

Honoured

• MSF: An Unusual Life

NOWTHENTHENNOWNOW

and

VIETNAM 30 YEARS AFTER THE FALL

OF SAIGON

Page 2: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

1

THECORRESPONDENTcontents

Meet the new President

Three men and the Rock

Sinclair publishes 20th title

It’s not the US Embassy

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005

2

34

27

19

18

4

12

14

22

36

From the Presidents

Cover Story – Indochina: The Ties That Bind

– Ghosts of Saigon

– 30 Years at 300 Millimetres

– Cambodian Sideshow

Media – Honouring Sandy Burton

Media – The Democratisation of Information

Media – FEER: A Protracted Farewell

Media – Stiletto by Max Kolbe

Charity Fund – Hands On Help and Language Centre

On The Wall – An Unusual Life

Book Reviews

Travel – Australia’s Ghan

Feature – Other People’s Luggage

FCC People and Around The Club

Professional Contacts

Out of Context – Ian Smith

30

16

40

38

Page 3: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

2

Corrections and clarifi cationsCorrection – Apologies to con-tributor Tom Fawthrop, author of the article Mingling in Mongla (The Correspondent, Jan-Feb 2005). He was incorrectly bylined Tom Fawcett.

Club Activities

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005

It gives me great pleasure to report that the past year has been good for the FCC on sev-

eral fronts and I am pleased to say we are handing over the reigns to the incoming board with a solid surplus on hand.

This year was a relatively smooth one in terms of governance issues and operational issues. The Charity Ball was a resounding success and this year’s Charity Ball looks set to beat last year’s fundraising totals. The Jazz Festival was a hit and we have had several exhibitions on the wall that have garnered the Club some well-deserved attention and praise.

Membership has been strong, so much so that we’ve instituted a waiting list. Perhaps more impor-tantly, the Board, after much debate on all sides of the issue, has insti-tuted a special one-time promo-tion to bring in more journalists and correspondents in order to stay true to the founding purposes of the Club.

The premises have been main-tained, although the incoming Board may have some tough deci-sions to make regarding renova-tion of the roof. We have a new che who has made good progress in raising the standard of the food we serve. Gilbert Cheng, out more-than-able General Manager, has made great strides in enhancing the quality and training of the Staff.

Thanks to the work of Keith Bradsher on the Professional Com-mittee, the FCC has maintained its

high standards in attracting a broad range of speakers at Club Events and Luncheons. With the untimely death of Sandy Burton, the Board recognized her outstanding con-tributions to the Club and to the field of journalism by renaming the Albert Room the Burton Room in her honour.

Overall, it was a relatively smooth year for the FCC and I am pleased to be able to hand over to the new Board a Club with wonder-ful leadership in place, both on the board level and the staff level.

I would also like to take the opportunity here to express my deep and abiding thanks t the members of the outgoing Board for their services to the Club. I would also simply say to Gilbert and the entire staff of the FCC that you will always have my thanks and appre-ciation for making my job as Presi-dent as easy and fulfilling as you have. Without Gilbert, and witout the Staff, the FCC would not be the second home that you have made for myself and for other members. I thank you from the bottom of my heart.

Matthew C. Driskill

> FROM THE OUTGOING PRESIDENT

Letters welcomeThe Correspondent welcomes letters (by e-mail please to [email protected] or [email protected]). It reserves the right to edit letters chosen for publication. Anonymous missives will be rejected. For verifi cation purposes only, and not for publication, please include your membership number (if applicable) and a daytime telephone number.

THE FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS’ CLUB,

HONG KONG2 Lower Albert Road, Central, Hong KongTel: (852) 2521 1511 Fax: (852) 2868 4092

E-mail: <[email protected]>Website: <www.fcchk.org>

President: Ilaria Maria SalaFirst Vice President: Jim Laurie

Second Vice President: Kevin Egan

Correspondent Member GovernorsPaul Bayfield, Keith Bradsher,

Mike Gonzales, Ernst Herb, Keri Ann Geiger, Ramon Pedrosa-Lopez, Chris

Slaughter, Rob Stewart

Journalist Member GovernorMark Clifford, Francis Moriarty

Associate Member GovernorsDavid Garcia, Steve Ushiyama,

Andy Chworowsky, Ralph Ybema

Hon. SecretaryRamon Pedrosa-Lopez

Hon. TreasurerSteve Ushiyama

Finance CommitteeConvener: Steve Ushiyama

Professional CommitteeConveners: Jim Laurie and Ernst Herb

House/Future Premises/Food and Beverage Committee

Convener: Dave Garcia

Membership CommitteeConvener: Steve Ushiyama

Constitution CommitteeConvener: Kevin Egan

House/F&B CommitteeConvener: David Garcia

Freedom of the Press CommitteeConvener: Francis Moriarty

Wall CommitteeConvener: Ilaria Maria Sala

General ManagerGilbert Cheng

The Correspondent© The Foreign Correspondents’ Club,

Hong Kong

The Correspondent is published six times a year. Opinions expressed by writers

in the magazine are not necessarily those of the Club.

Publications CommitteeConvener: Paul Bayfield Editor: Diane Stormont

Editorial and ProductionHongkongnow.com ltd

Tel: 2521 2814E-mail: [email protected]

PrinterHop Sze Printing Company Ltd

Advertising EnquiriesSandra Pang

Pronto CommunicationsTel: 2540 6872 Fax: 2116 0189

Mobile: 9077 7001E-mail: [email protected]

Cover picture: AFP

Page 4: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

3

To have been elected as President of the For-eign Correspondents’ Club of Hong Kong is truly an honour, and even more so after

such a hotly contested election. So first of all I wish to thank those who have supported me. I would also like to thank all members of the FCC because it is the contribution of each and every-one of us which makes the Club such a great place for fun and for work.

I am truly looking forward to a busy year, listening to all members, working with you and with our excellent staff. We are lucky to have such a well-oiled machine! We can look forward to many interesting luncheons and press events, music, serious discussions and fun parties – and also great food and great drinks.

The new Board has some familiar faces and some new additions and all are full of enthusiasm and desire to give their best to the Club.

At the end of the year Hong Kong will host the World Trade Organisation summit, which is going to bring hundreds of correspondents into town, and I believe this will be a great occasion for us to host particularly meaning-ful speakers, and to pro-vide the hospitality we are famous for to visiting jour-nalists.

But boy, has this Pres-idency started with a bang! Our colleague Ching Cheong’s detention on the mainland, on “espionage”

charges, has reminded us all, should there have been any need, that being a journalist in China does present extraordinary challenges. The case has sparked a lot of debate and interest in Hong Kong, since Cheong, a senior writer for Singa-pore’s Straits Times, is a well-known veteran of the Hong Kong press corps. His judgment has been trusted for decades by all those who know him.

We have added our voice to those who have written to the Hong Kong’s and mainland author-ities asking for this case to be treated transpar-ently and with full disclosure of the evidence against Cheong, if any. Should such evidence not be forthcoming we have asked for the prompt release of our colleague, one of many journalists currently imprisoned on the mainland. Our sym-pathy and support goes to these brave profession-als, and to their friends and families.

We look forward to the day, hopefully near, when this case will be solved for the best, and for the time

when the press will finally be free on the Mainland. We are once again reminded of what a special place Hong Kong is, and of the unique role our Club plays in this amazing city.

Do let me count on your advice and support for the coming year, which cer-tainly promises to be an interesting and stimulat-ing one!

Ilaria Maria Sala

> FROM THE INCOMING PRESIDENT

Back row: Ralph Ybema, Ramon Pedrosa-Lopez, Steve Ushiyama, Dave Garcia, Paul Bayfi eld, Keith Bradsher, Mark Cliff ord. Front: Kevin Egan, Ilaria Maria Sala, Jim Laurie.

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005

ENRICO SUTTI

Page 5: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 20054

It was a fellow journalist who popped the question. “Why had we come?” It was a good ques-tion. Why had most of us come not just once, but three times to

Ho Chi Minh City for reunions on the 20th (in 1995), the 25th (2000) and the 30th (2005) anniversaries of the fall of Saigon on April 30, 1975?

Denis Gray, the AP’s long-serving Bureau Chief in Bangkok, was inter-viewing us for a story on this third reunion. The gathering was a magnet to more than 100 journalists from 14 countries – megastars as well as those of us who were not top dogs – for the largest gathering of the three.

Gray’s questions that second night on the rooftop bar of the Rex Hotel had all of us debating the reasons we had returned.

No one ever really answered the questions and the Voice of Ameri-ca’s Alisha Ryu’s comment just com-pounded the problem: “I’d never go back to the hellhole Baghdad for a reunion!” Let me officially state, before I get into real trouble, that Ali-sha is far too young to have covered ‘Nam. The former FCCer is VOA’s East Africa Bureau Chief in Nairobi, covers Iraq and holidays in Vietnam which is how she came to catch up with old friends at the reunion.

Thirty years after the fall of

Saigon, the war in Indochina continues to

exert a hold over the journalists

who covered it, Saul Lockhart

reports.

IndochinaThe Ties that Bind

Cover Story

Page 6: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 5

Are Alisha’s views in accord with the new generation of jour-nos – those who covered Somalia and the other horrors of Africa, Beirut, Kosovo, Iraq War #1 and of course the latest horrors in Iraq and the ongoing mess in Palestine? I can’t answer that.

Who would go back to a hell-hole for a reunion? Many would, as the 60th anniversary reunions at Normandy in 2004 and this year’s VE Day celebrations show. But that’s the soldiers. What about the journalists? Methinks there were reunions for those covering WWII and Korea. Many hellholes there.

Gray quotes Kurt Volkert, a German-born television cam-eraman who covered the Viet-nam War for CBS, as saying, “We probably all loved Vietnam despite the problems. It had a certain magic and we never for-get that….Iraq won’t do it.’’

The Saigon of old during the days of the American war was never as dangerous as Baghdad, even though there were street bombings. It was crass, corrupt, obnoxious and crime-ridden. It was packed with soldiers and military vehicles and weapons of all sorts, and as you would expect, with bars and brothels.

The city was hated by many. In spite of all that it, had a cer-tain charm. There was some-thing special about the place and the people. Despite the war, Saigon had an enjoyable ambiance. Did I feel that way when I was there in the late 60s, or is this a revision of history with the inevitable mellowing of time? I hon-estly cannot say. I know I hated Saigon at times, and yet enjoyed myself thor-oughly when there, particularly when I was speaking French and partaking of “the other Saigon”.

I enjoyed my time in Vietnam. Yet, I feel guilty amid the death and destruction that I felt excited and alive; that I had good times and have good memories. I revelled in the cama-

raderie that is only found in times of stress. I enjoyed the city. I grew up in Vietnam. I am not certain I really wanted to grow up then and there, but I did. I felt I was part of history and a witness to history. Is that too grandi-ose a sentiment for a lowly freelance reporter covering his first war?

It can’t be just the charm of old Sai-gon that draws us back decades later. After all, Beirut was a wonderful city before it was torn apart by war. Bagh-dad too, to a lesser extent. Maybe a charming city with a bit of personality is not the only answer. There has to be something else. The camaraderie? Yes.

Of course. But other wars have and had camaraderie. What’s so special about the Vietnam War’s version?

Part of the explanation must lie in the sheer length of time involved. The American phase of the war lasted for well over a decade. Thousands of corre-spondents passed through Viet-nam and there were a couple of hundred who were there for very long stretches. Saigon was incongruous. Some correspon-dents brought their families. I remember renting an apart-ment over the garage attached to Don North’s villa. The ex-FCCer who worked for ABC lived there with his wife and three small kids. Annie van Es, ex-FCC president Hugh’s wife (he of that famous helicopter evacuation photo) also lived in Saigon. In the morning they both went to work; Annie to an office, Hugh to a battlefield.

Vanity Fair contacted Edie Lederer, the AP’s UN corre-spondent in New York who organised all three anniversary events with former colleague Horst Faas, to cover the third reunion. (For the June issue, if anyone’s interested.) They took a photo of people they called the “icons”. People such as AP’s Pulitzer Prize-winners Horst Faas, Peter Arnett and Nick Ut

(who took the famous “napalm girl” photo of girl naked and badly burned running down Route 1), prize-winning photographers Hugh van Es and Tim Page, photojournalist Dirck Halstead and Joe Galloway (then of UPI, now Knight Ridder) whose 1965 account of the Ia Drang campaign in We Were Soldiers Once…And Young was made into a film starring Mel Gibson, among others.

To be truthful, we were all a bit astounded and flattered. There’s always been press coverage – wire service sto-ries, a few features in magazines – but it was all rather spontaneous. But a

I still haven’t answered the question of why we return. Could it be guilt?

That’s possible. Could it be remembrance? The service at the Cathedral where the

names of the dead were read out was very moving. For the record, 320 media

people on all sides lost their lives in both the French and American

Vietnam Wars.

Page 7: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 20056

Cover Story

BY JIM LAURIE

I flew back to Vietnam in April with the intention of attending a reunion of old colleagues with

whom I had covered the war. Instead, I ended up at my father-in-law’s funeral. “Grand-father Vo” or “Ong Ngoai,” as my son calls him, led a full life; his death at 90 should not have been a shock. And of course it was.

Ong Ngoai’s body, care-fully washed by his children, dressed in his finest silk pyja-mas, and covered by a simple but sparkling white sheet, was laid out on the hardwood bed in which he had slept for years. The children placed buckets of ice under the bed to keep their grandfather cool.

The family gathered in the Saigon house that had been his home since the early 1980s. Some arrived from the Central Coast – Qui Nhon, Nha Trang, Cam Ranh. Others, once the refugees of the 70s and 80s,

flew in from Montreal, Tampa and Los Angeles to pay their respects, to show their love, to say goodbyes.

Ong Ngoai willed his body to the Ho Chi Minh City University Medical

School – a thoroughly modern ges-ture in a very traditional home. “Let the students learn something from this old corpse – if they can!” he had exclaimed with a hearty laugh to his

youngest daughter. As Ong Ngoai was taken

away, my tearful wife cried out: “Father’s spirit is here, I can feel it. He’s watching us. He remains in this house!” The family quickly assembled a shrine which grew in size day-by-day and drew a parade of tearful mourners who lit incense and prostrated themselves before Grandfather’s photo.

Born in Central Vietnam near Qui Nhon, Ong Ngoai joined the Vietminh in the 1930s to help expel the French from Indochi-na. When the French were gone, he refused to join the Viet Cong resistance to the Americans. He had become disillusioned with the communists, and wanted to provide a good life for a growing family, which by 1960 numbered nine children.

Still, always a practical man,

Ghosts of SaigonMemories of the Past That Should Not Be Forgoteen

big time photo-shoot with some of the world’s most famous photographers and writers as subjects? Well why not? In fact, the press so mobbed the group that Edie declared that on the sec-ond night, between 6 and 7 pm, the press would be allowed into the party to interview anyone they wished. The press was there covering the press. Hugh van Es and Vietnam-born Nik Ut were mobbed like movie stars by the Vietnamese media.

I still haven’t answered the ques-

tion of why we return. Could it be guilt? That’s possible. Could it be remembrance? The service at the Cathedral where the names of the dead were read out was very mov-ing. For the record, 320 media people on all sides lost their lives in both the French and American Vietnam Wars.

However you look at it, Ho Chi Minh City of today has fought back, not from physical ruin á la Berlin, but from political defeat. But it is a very

different place now from the rather decadent and exciting city of the 50s, 60s and 70s. The country too has changed…its move into what Deng Xiaoping called “Market Socialism” is evident. The victory parades this year in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City were low-key, with the emphasis on par-ticipation by school groups and floats, less so on the military.

Prime Minister Phan Van Khai will be visiting the U.S. soon. How’s that for change. I wonder if he’ll be invited

Handpainting the Vietcong victory in Saigon

AFP/HOANG DINH NAM

Page 8: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 7

Grandfather quietly stayed in touch with his older brother who had gone to Hanoi to work his way up as a party apparatchik. With independent South Vietnam developing a capi-talist future, Ong Ngoai turned his sharp mind to business and built a prosperous trade in hardwood timber for the Japanese market. He bought homes for his large family in Qui Nhon, Nha Trang and Saigon. During the war, all three of his sons served in the South Vietnamese army. All of them made it home.

Outside the home where incense burned for grandfather, thousands of Vietnamese rehearsed celebrations marking the 30th anniversary of the fall of Saigon. They marched about the city centre. This year’s was not like the usual military parades that I have watched on past anniversa-ries. This year, thousands of young people, none with any memory of war, assembled a flotilla of floats cel-ebrating commerce, technology, the IT revolution, foreign investment and tourism.

In front of the old French Opera House, extraordinarily lithe and handsome fashion models strut-ted around Lam Son Square. Down near Doc Lap (Independence) Palace (renamed Reunification Palace by the communists), an army of young men representing the hotel and restau-rant industry shouldered seven-foot high papier mâché forks, knives and spoons.

I imagine Ong Ngoai’s spirit soar-ing above, observing all this. I can see him stroking his straggly Ho Chi Minh-style beard, chuckling at this glorious socialist-capitalist nonsense.

Right up until a week before his death, Grandfather walked the streets of Saigon with a sprightly step. He smiled at the pretty girls in their ao dais. He noted the city’s vigour, its renewed prosperity.

His children and grandchildren who once fled Vietnam had returned to invest in local business and buy property. Ong Ngoai also knew that many Vietnamese are afflicted with a collective amnesia about their recent past. But grandfather was not one to forget. He knew that for most Viet-namese, much of the last 30 years were times of profound suffering.

During a dark period of total mis-management, Hanoi’s intransigent mandarins insisted on forced collec-tivisation and punishment for any-one who had enjoyed the advantages of life under the old Saigon regime.

Modelled after China’s econom-ic policies, Vietnam’s reforms came late—only in the past ten to 15 years. Only in very recent years have busi-nessmen received some measure of respect and have overseas Vietnam-ese been truly welcomed home. They now bring to the Vietnamese econo-my at least US$3 billion each year.

Before 1990, Grandfather and other capitalists, their businesses shut down, their properties confis-

cated, lived as pariahs in Vietnamese society. Immediately after the fall of Saigon, grandfather, fearing arrest, fled his home and with his youngest son, went into hiding in the forests which for 20 years had supported his timber business. He emerged years later, contacted his brother in Hanoi, and managed to find an accommoda-tion. By keeping quiet, he was spared further reprisals.

By then, his daughter (my wife), and other children had fled the coun-try. They became part of a flood of boat people that reached a horrible climax in the mid-1980’s. Ong Ngoai’s oldest daughter died a painful death on an Indonesian island after a har-rowing boat journey from coastal Vietnam.

As I look back on the 15 years I knew him and the 30 years since I watched North Vietnamese forces capture the city of Saigon, I imag-ine the spirit of Ong Ngoai hovering above the spectacle of modern Viet-nam, urging the young generation not to forget the past.

Jim Laurie was President of the FCC from 2001-02 and is currently 1st Vice President. He worked for NBC News during the later stages of the war and was the only American television net-work correspondent to remain behind to cover the North Vietnamese victory in Saigon in 1975. This article is reprinted with kind permission of the Asian Wall Street Journal.

to Dubya’s ranch and we’ll see photos of him in a 10-gallon hat.

The headline in The Economist summed up this anniversary: “Amer-ica lost, capitalism won.” But that still does not explain our fascination with the country. Why do we return? I don’t think I’ll ever be able to answer that question.

Saul Lockhart was the previous editor of this magazine and served several terms on the FCC Board of Governors. He now lives in Australia. Some relics of the war

Page 9: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 20058

Cover Story

BY HUBERT VAN ES

Thirty years ago I was fortunate enough to take a photograph that has become perhaps the

most recognisable image of the fall of Saigon – you know it, the one that is always described as showing an American helicopter evacuating people from the roof of the United States Embassy. Well, like so many things about the Vietnam War, it’s not exactly what it seems. In fact, the photo is not of the embassy at all; the helicopter was actually on the roof of an apartment building in downtown Saigon where senior Cen-tral Intelligence Agency employees were housed.

It was Tuesday, April 29, 1975. Rumours about the final evacuation of Saigon had been rife for weeks, with thousands of people - Ameri-can civilians, Vietnamese citizens and third-country nationals - being loaded on transport planes at Tan Son Nhut air base, to be flown to United States bases on Guam, Okinawa and elsewhere. Everybody knew that the city was surrounded by the North

Vietnamese, and that it was only a matter of time before they would take it. Around 11 a.m. the call came from Brian Ellis, the bureau chief of CBS News, who was in charge of coordi-nating the evacuation of the foreign press corps. It was on!

The assembly point was on Gia Long Street, opposite the Grall Hospi-tal, where buses would pick up those wanting to leave. The evacuation was supposed to have been announced by a “secret” code on Armed Forces Radio: the comment that “the temperature is 105 degrees and rising,” followed by eight bars of “White Christmas”. Don’t even ask which idiot dreamed this up. There were no secrets in Saigon in those days, and every Vietnamese

and his dog knew the code. In the end, I think, they scrapped the idea. I certainly have no recollection of hear-ing it.

The journalists who had decided to leave went to the assembly point, each carrying only a small carry-on bag, as instructed. But the Vietnam-ese seeing this exodus were quick to figure out what was happening, and dozens showed up to try to board the buses. It took quite a while for the vehicles to show – they were being driven by fully armed marines, who were not very familiar with Saigon streets – and then some scuffles broke out, as the marines had been told to let only the press on board. We did manage to sneak in some Vietnamese

300YEARS AT30

MILLIMETRES

Not the US Embassy roof, 2005: van Es with the helicopter inserted for perspective.

PHO

TO IL

LUST

RATI

ON

BA

BY F

ERN

AN

DEZ

Page 10: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 9

civilians, and the buses headed for the airport.

I wasn’t on them. I had decided, along with several colleagues at United Press International, to stay as long as possible. As a Dutch citizen, I was prob-ably taking less of a risk than the oth-ers. They included our bureau chief, Al Dawson; Paul Vogle, a terrific reporter who spoke fluent Vietnamese; Leon Daniel, an affable Southerner; and a freelancer working for UPI named Chad Huntley. I was the only photographer left, but luckily we had a bunch of Vietnamese stringers, who kept bring-ing in pictures from all over the city. These guys were remarkable. They had turned down all offers to be evacuated and decided to see the end of the war that had overturned their lives.

On the way back from the evacu-ation point, where I had gotten some great shots of a marine confronting a Vietnamese mother and her little boy, I photographed many panicking Viet-namese in the streets burning papers that could identify them as having had ties to the United States. South Vietnamese soldiers were discarding their uniforms and weapons along the streets leading to the Saigon River, where they hoped to get on boats to the coast. I saw a group of young boys, barely in their teens, picking up M-16s abandoned on Tu Do Street. It’s amazing I didn’t see any accidental shootings.

Returning to the office, which was on the top floor of the rather grandly named Peninsula Hotel, I started pro-cessing, editing and printing my pic-tures from that morning, as well as the film from our stringers. Our regu-lar darkroom technician had decided to return to the family farm in the countryside. Two more UPI staffers, Bert Okuley and Ken Englade, were still at the bureau. They had decided to skip the morning evacuation and try their luck in the early evening at the United States Embassy, where big Chinook helicopters were lifting evacuees off the roof to waiting Navy ships off the coast. (Both made it out that evening.)

If you looked north from the office balcony, toward the cathedral, about four blocks from us, on the corner of Tu Do and Gia Long, you could see a building called the Pittman Apart-ments, where we knew the CIA sta-tion chief and many of his officers lived. Several weeks earlier the roof of the elevator shaft had been reinforced with steel plate so that it would be able to take the weight of a helicopter. A makeshift wooden ladder now ran

from the lower roof to the top of the shaft. Around 2.30 in the afternoon, while I was working in the darkroom, I suddenly heard Bert Okuley shout, “Van Es, get out here, there’s a chop-per on that roof!” [Ed- This is a sanitised version of what was actually said.]

I grabbed my camera and the lon-gest lens left in the office – it was only 300 millimetres, but it would have to do – and dashed to the balcony. Looking at

the Pittman Apartments, I could see 20 or 30 people on the roof, climbing the ladder to an Air America Huey helicop-ter. At the top of the ladder stood an American in civilian clothes, pulling people up and shoving them inside.

Of course, there was no possibility that all the people on the roof could get into the helicopter, and it took off with 12 or 14 on board. (The recom-mended maximum for that model was eight.) Those left on the roof

waited for hours, hoping for more helicopters to arrive. To no avail.

After shooting about 10 frames, I went back to the darkroom to process the film and get a print ready for the regular 5 pm transmission to Tokyo from Saigon’s telegraph office. In those days, pictures were transmitted via radio signals, which at the receiv-ing end were translated back into an image. A 5-inch-by-7-inch black-and-

I grabbed my camera and the longest lens left in the office – it was only 300 millimetres, but it would have to do – and dashed to the

balcony. Looking at the Pittman Apartments, I could see 20 or 30 people on the roof, climbing the ladder to an Air America Huey helicopter.

Not the US Embassy roof, 1975.

HUGH VAN ES

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THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 200510

Cover Story

white print with a short caption took 12 minutes to send.

And this is where the confusion began. For the caption, I wrote very clearly that the helicopter was taking evacuees off the roof of a downtown Saigon building. Apparently, editors didn’t read captions carefully in those days, and they just took it for granted that it was the embassy roof, since

that was the main evacuation site. This mistake has been carried on in the form of incorrect captions for decades. My efforts to correct the mis-understanding were futile, and even-tually I gave up. Thus one of the best-known images of the Vietnam War shows something other than what almost everyone thinks it does.

Later that afternoon, five Vietnam-ese civilians came into my office looking distraught and afraid. They had been on the Pittman roof when the chopper had landed, but were unable to get a seat. They asked for our help in getting out. They had worked in the offices of the United States Agency for International Development, and were afraid that this connection might harm them when the city fell to the Communists.

One of them had a two-way radio that could connect to the embassy, and Chad Huntley managed to reach somebody there. He asked for a heli-copter to land on the roof of our hotel to pick them up, but was told it was impossible. Al Dawson put them up for the night, because by then a cur-few was in place; we heard sporadic shooting in the streets, as looters ransacked buildings evacuated by the Americans. All through the night the big Chinooks landed and took off

from the embassy, each accompanied by two Cobra gunships in case they took ground fire.

After a restless night, our photo stringers started coming back with film they had shot during the late afternoon of the 29th and that morn-ing – the 30th. Nguyen Van Tam, our radio-photo operator, went back and forth between our bureau and the tele-

graph office to send the pictures out to the world. I printed the last batch around 11 am and put them in order of importance for him to transmit. The last was a shot of the six-storey chancery, next to the embassy, burning after being looted during the night.

About 12.15 Mr. Tam called me and with a trembling voice told me that North Vietnamese troops were downstairs at the radio office. I told him to keep transmitting until they pulled the plug, which they did some five minutes later. The last photo sent from Saigon showed the burning chancery at the top half of the picture; the lower half were lines of static.

The war was over.I went out into the streets to pho-

tograph the self-proclaimed liberators. We had been assured by the North Vietnamese delegates, who had been giving Saturday morning briefings to the foreign press out at the airport, that their troops had been told to expect foreigners with cameras and not to harm them. But just to make sure they wouldn’t take me for an American, I wore, on my camouflage hat, a small plastic Dutch flag printed with the words Boa Chi Hoa Lan (Dutch Press). The soldiers, most of them quite young, were remarkably friendly

and happy to pose for pictures. It was a weird feeling to come face to face with the “enemy”, and I imagine that was how they felt too.

I left Saigon on June 1, by plane for Vientiane, Laos, after having been “invited” by the new regime to leave, as were the majority of newspeople of all nationalities who had stayed behind to witness the fall of Saigon.

It was 15 years before I returned. My absence was not for a lack of desire, but for the repeated rejections of my visa applications by an official at the press department of the Foreign Ministry. It turned out that I had a his-tory with this man; he had come to our office about a week after Saigon fell because, as the editor of one of North Vietnam’s military publications, he wanted to print in his magazine some pictures we had of the “libera-tion”. I showed him 52 images that we had been unable to send out since April 30, and said he could have them only if he used his influence to make it possible for us first to transmit them to the West. He said that was not pos-sible, so I told him there was no deal.

He obviously had a long memory, and I assume it was only after he retired or died that my actions were forgiven and I was given a visa. I have since returned many times from my home in Hong Kong, including for the 20th and 25th anniversaries of the fall, at which many old Vietnam hands got together and reminisced about the “good old days”.

Now I am returning for the 30th anniversary reunion. It will be good to be with old comrades and, again, many a glass will be hoisted to the memories of departed friends - both the colleagues who made it out and the Vietnamese we left behind.

Photographer Hubert van Es, FCC President from 1982-83, covered the Vietnam War, the Moro Rebellion in the Philippines and the Soviet inva-sion of Afghanistan.

Reprinted with kind permission of The New York Times.

About 12.15 Mr. Tam called me and with a trembling voice told me that that North

Vietnamese troops were downstairs at the radio office. I told him to keep transmitting until they pulled the plug, which they did

some five minutes later.

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In contrast to the high turn-out in Saigon, only three journalists rath-er forlornly appeared in the Cam-

bodian capital in remembrance of the war that spread into the Southeast Asian nation in 1970 – correspondent Elizabeth Becker, photo-journalist Al Rockoff and me. It was, to be truthful, a bit of a damp squib.

There were so few of us that we could easily have squeezed into the crowded bar of the For-eign Correspondents’ Club in Phnom Penh, as journalists had in the past. However, the Phnom Penh FCC has become entirely the haunt of tourists, looking for a supposed glamour, and some NGOs and diplo-mats, and has nowadays no real con-nection with journalists at all.

All this is a little sad, because the war, or wars, in Cambodia had been particularly dangerous for correspon-dents and photographers. Prince Norodom Sihanouk, as he was then, did not encourage jour-nalists’ visits – one of his major errors, I believe – and it was not until the coup against him on 18 March, 1970, and his over-throw, that the press had easy access.

It was a double-edged sword, however, because it was a deadly access. By the end of 1970, 25 foreign journalists were dead or unaccounted for in Cam-bodia. It is perhaps unfair to mention the names of

only some who died but not oth-ers. Yet few can forget photographers Sean Flynn, and his companion Dana Stone, who vanished in 1970 at a Viet-cong roadblock on Highway One.

They were apparently handed over to the Khmer Rouge, which was as good as a death sentence, and never heard from again.

Whereas the war in Vietnam itself really did end in 1975, despite later Khmer Rouge and Chinese incur-sions, and the Vietnamese thrust into Cambodia, in Cambodia it never did. Even today the Cambodian pop-ulation is still traumatised by the experiences of the Killing Fields.

Cambodia is well worth visiting for the chance to see Angkor and other temples, but its people are not the same as those we remem-bered from the 70s. They are not the warm and welcoming, trusting, naive and courteous folks we knew before. They have lost their relaxed

charm. This is hardly their fault. It is the fault of the horrors of life under Pol Pot, and the fact that there is still no good governance.

Becker, formerly of the Washing-ton Post, but now with the New York Times, gave a lecture to Cambodian university students about her visit to Cambodia towards the end of Khmer Rouge rule, just before the Vietnam-ese intervention, when one of her party of three was murdered by an intruder inside the state guesthouse. She spoke of her interview with Pol Pot, the late Khmer Rouge leader, and described him as a terrifying fig-ure. “I was afraid of him, and shook like a leaf throughout the interview,” she told students.

Rockoff, who bravely stayed behind after the last helicopter lifted off, was there when the Khmer Rouge entered the city and took some his-toric pictures of the new masters and their victims. He achieved more fame when he was portrayed in the movie The Killing Fields and for the past 20 years has been working on a book of photographs of Cambodia.

Thankfully, those colleagues who died in Cambodia, including all the Cambodian journalists, were not forgotten by fellow correspondents. Their names were read out in front of the cathedral in Saigon, along

with those who died in Vietnam. Among them was my own reporter/interpreter Sok Ngoun, bludgeoned to death for having worked for a western news agency.

Such was the fate of Cambodians who tried to bring news of their suffer-ing country to the world.

James Pringle covered

the wars in Cambodia for Reuters, Newsweek and the London Times.

The 30th anniversary of the fall of Phnom Penh to the Khmer Rouge on 17th April, 1975, attracted only a handful of correspondents, despite the horrendously high death toll of journalists there, reports James Pringle.

Cambodian Sideshow

Khmer Rouge troops roll into Phnom Penh

AFP

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We gathered on April 22, upstairs at the FCC, to honour the late Sandra

Burton at a ceremony in which the Albert Room was renamed The Bur-ton Room. The Philippine Govern-ment’s Order of the Golden Heart, a massive gold chain awarded posthu-mously to Sandy, is the centrepiece of a selection of photographs show-ing Sandy as we all knew her best: working and laughing.

In one image, she is walking out of a Mindanao Islamic Liberation Front base at Camp Abu Bakar in southern Philippines. In others, she

is with then Philippine Presidents Corazon Aquino and Fidel Ramos. With colleagues from Time magazine she is seen in Tiananmen Square in June 1989. The shot of her with a Burmese dancing troupe highlights her sense of humour. Dearest of all to those who knew Sandy is the portrait of her enjoying her beach life in Bali with long-time partner Robert Delfs.

The commemoration ceremony was simple, but true. Robert held his nerve, just, as he recalled first meeting Sandy in these same rooms of the FCC. Former Club President,

Honouring Sandy

PHOTOGRAPHY BYKEES METSELAAR AND BOB DAVIS

Matthew Driskill (top) and Robert Delfs (left) at the unveiling ceremony.

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colleague and friend Philip Bow-ring explained why Sandra Burton meant so much to journalism. He noted she was not the high-profile, celebrity type of hack we see all too many of these days.

Instead, Sandra Burton “was the sort of journalist we should all admire the most,” he said. That’s because she combined the three key qualities a good journalist must have: she was extraordinarily com-petent, she was honest and moral, and she was good fun, too.

That’s why the FCC now has The Burton Room. – Vaudine England

Friends and colleagues honour Sandy.

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Blogs first appeared in the late 1990s as on-line journals where people posted entries about

their experiences, opinions or hob-bies. Initially, this required some pro-gramming skills, but as easy-to-use software and cheap broadband access became available, blogging entered the mainstream.

Today, there are millions of blogs devoted to everything from aboriginal art to zoo-keeping. And while the United States is home to the largest number of blogs and English remains the dominant language, blogging is rapidly becoming a global phenom-enon. Directory site Blogwise (www.blogwise.com) lists blogs in 186 coun-tries, including more than 100 in Hong Kong and over 220 in China. Some estimates put the number of blogs in China at over a million.

Like everything else on the Inter-net, blogs vary wildly in quality. Some are so mawkish they would make an angst-ridden teenager blush, while others are so extreme they would test the conviction of the most ardent free-speech advocate. Many simply fade away as the author loses interest. But there have been some interesting and unexpected developments. The rise of corporate blogs is one.

Technology companies are in the forefront of the corporate blogging movement. Microsoft’s Robert Scoble (http://radio.weblogs.com/0001011/) is among the best-known corporate

bloggers and over 3,000 IBM employ-ees now maintain blogs on topics ranging from autonomic computing to software architecture. Boeing, General Motors, Google, HP, Sun Microsystems and Yahoo! all publish blogs, and con-sultants now offer guidance to CEOs who want to join the blogosphere.

The emergence of corporate blog-ging surprised many people, because the speed and spontaneity of blog-ging challenges the traditional com-mand-and-control model of corpo-rate communications. However, many organisations have found that this risk is offset by the ability of blogs to rapidly disseminate information and gather feedback. And because blogs bypass intermediaries like media out-lets and market research firms, they allow companies to interact directly with their audiences.

Blogs also promote openness. Com-panies have discovered that audiences ignore – or worse, ridicule – blogs that are sanitised by lawyers or filled with

PR platitudes. By recognising mis-takes and sharing lessons learned, blogs put a human face on the compa-ny and deepen relationships with cus-tomers and partners. This openness does have limits, however. Earlier this year, the word “dooced” was coined to describe the act of being fired for blog-ging about your job.

Sites such as Instapundit (www.instapundit.com), which combine orig-inal commentary with links to other blogs and news stories in the conven-tional media, are another departure from the blog-as-diary model. Run by Glenn Reynolds, a law professor at the University of Tennessee, Instapundit is one of the most popular sites in the blogosphere, receiving over 120,000 visits each day.

Instapundit brings an element of serendipity to its readers by linking to less well-known sites run by people with special expertise. Vice Squad (http://vicesquad.blogspot.com), a blog published by a group of Chicago academics with an interest in pub-lic policy on alcohol, tobacco, drugs, prostitution, gambling and pornogra-phy is one such site. The Volokh Con-spiracy (http://volokh.com), founded by UCLA Law School Professor Eugene Volokh – an authority on free speech law, copyright law, the law of govern-ment and religion – is another.

Instapundit also highlights emerg-ing issues that have caught the atten-tion of left-leaning bloggers includ-ing Eschaton (http://atrios.blogspot.com) and the Daily Kos (http://www.dailykos.com) or their right-of-centre peers Little Green Footballs (http://www.littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog)

The process started with Gutenberg, whose printing press put the Bible into the hands of the common man, and continued when cable TV ended the era of big-network dominance. Today, the democratisation of information has reached a new level, with the growing popularity of the web log, or blog, argues Chris Dillon.

The Democratisation ofINFORMATION

www.instapundit.com www.rogerlsimon.com

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THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 15

or Power Line (http://www.powerline-blog.com) as these stories make their way into the mainstream media.

For example, in 2002 Eschaton played a key role in publicising a speech by Republican Senator Trent Lott that endorsed the segregationist views of Senator Strom Thurmond. Continuing coverage by Eschaton, Instapundit and others kept the story alive until it was picked up by the Washington Post and New York Times. This sparked dozens of other articles and op-ed pieces call-ing for Lott’s resignation, which he tendered on December 20.

Last autumn, a report on CBS’s 60 Minutes II alleged U.S. President George W. Bush received preferen-tial treatment when he served in the Texas Air National Guard in the 1970s. The claim was based on what the TV network said were newly uncovered National Guard memos. Within hours of the broadcast, posts appeared on Power Line and Little Green Footballs stating that the memos were forgeries. Typography experts soon proved the memos could not be genuine because they had been produced using Micro-soft Word. Ultimately, blog coverage resulted in the resignation of veteran news anchor Dan Rather.

More recently, Captain’s Quarters (http://www.captainsquartersblog.com), a site run by a Minnesota-based call-centre manager, sparked an uproar in Canada by leaking the proceedings of an inquiry into alleged misdeeds by the governing Liberal Party. The blogger’s reports, which circumvented a nationwide publica-tion ban, may yet result in early par-liamentary elections in Canada.

Incidents like these and blog-gers’ enthusiasm for chasing down and critiquing stories in the main-stream media have provoked animos-ity between the two camps. Bloggers have been called unprofessional, con-spiracy theorists and a lynch mob, while bloggers accuse journalists of incompetence, arrogance and liberal (or alternatively, conservative) bias.

Things have become more com-plex as the line between blog-gers and journalists begins to

blur. Several mainly conservative newspaper columnists have taken up blogging and in March, Garrett Graff became the first blogger to receive a White House press pass. Bloggers have also begun posting first-hand accounts of unfolding events, in what has been dubbed the Citizen Journal-ist movement. Blogs such as Iraq the Model (http://iraqthemodel.blogspot.com) and Hammorabi (http://ham-morabi.blogspot.com) have been well received in the West, where people have been hungry for news about Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein.

Blogging is also taking off in Iran, with sites such as Iran Focus (http://www.iranfocus.com) and Regime Change Iran (http://regimechangei-ran.blogspot.com) covering develop-ments in that country. This coverage has not been welcomed by the Iranian authorities, which recently sentenced blogger Arash Cigarchi to a 14-year prison term for expressing his opin-ions on the Internet.

Closer to home, Chen Jiahao, a 23-year-old Singaporean student living in the U.S., shut down his blog after a

Singapore government agency threat-ened to sue him for defamation.

A*STAR, an agency focusing on sci-ence and research, withdrew its threat of legal action after Chen closed his site and apologised for his remarks.

In addition to making governments uncomfortable, some see citizen jour-nalists as a challenge to global news-agency giants such as Reuters, the Asso-ciated Press and AFP. Los Angeles-based blogger and author Roger L. Simon (http://www.rogerlsimon.com) has sug-gested that, in addition to providing a fresh perspective on events in the Middle East, citizen journalists could displace foreign correspondents. Simon believes that bloggers’ superior local knowledge, language skills and ability to operate without guides or interpret-ers gives them a tremendous advantage over foreign correspondents.

Liveblogging – posting commen-tary on a blog while an event is occur-ring – is also blurring the distinction between journalist and blogger. Events ranging from the Academy Awards to President Bush’s last State of the Union Address have been liveblogged, a trend that is fuelled by increasingly ubiquitous wireless networks, mobile phone technology and bloggers’ desire to test the limits of a new medium.

Organisations are also experi-menting with liveblogging as a way of publicising their activities.

In official blog coverage (http://www.forumblog.org/blog/2005/01/do_us_troops_ta.html) of a World Eco-nomic Forum session in January, CNN chief news executive Eason Jordan, “asserted that he knew of 12 journal-ists who had not only been killed by U.S. troops in Iraq, but they had in fact been targeted.” Forum participants and bloggers quickly demanded that Jordan substantiate his claims. On February 11, CNN announced Jordan’s resignation citing concerns that his remarks “threatened to tarnish the network he helped build.”

So will blogs put the mainstream media out of business? Probably not. While they offer a growing volume of original reportage, the bulk of the

www.vicesquad.blogspot.com www.iranfocus.com

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news found on blogs continues to come from the mainstream media. And despite fabricated quotes, plagia-rism and other scandals that have hit some of the world’s largest media out-lets, these companies still command levels of trust and brand recognition that blogs can only dream about.

Then there is the question of money. Advertising and reader con-tributions provide some revenue, but the vast majority of blogs are labours of love, not businesses. Steady, sus-tainable revenues may eventually come from initiatives like Pajama Media Partners (which is developing an ad network for Internet advertis-ers, feeds blog content to mainstream media and the public, and is develop-ing systems to help the public find blog content) but this is still some way off. In the meantime, blogs will be constrained by the reality that, as a wise person once noted, “Opinions are free, but facts cost money.”

Rather than spelling the end of the mainstream media, blogs are more likely to be a complementary source of information, much as cable TV programmes supplement those on network television. Blogs also have a valuable role to play as a watchdog, scrutinising coverage in the media. These functions are likely to expand, as podcasting, photoblogging, videob-logging and other multimedia tech-niques become more common.

One thing is certain, however. As technology becomes even more powerful, the cost of data storage continues to plummet and wireless networks proliferate, the blog genie is unlikely to climb quietly back into its bottle.

Chris Dillon is the principal of Dil-lon Communications Ltd. He doesn’t publish a blog, but he does like to read them. He cites Jazz great Thelonius Monk as saying: “Writing about jazz is like dancing about architecture.” Magazine articles about blogging are equally awk-ward. For an online version of this story, with hyperlinks to the each of the blogs mentioned in the text, visit the Dillon Communications site at www.dilloncom-munications.com.

Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the recent series of commiser-

ations over the death of the Far East-ern Economic Review was that it was remarkably civilised. Indeed, shout-ing matches were rare, sordid gossip was kept to a minimum and blatant hostility largely kept under wraps.

(Well, a senior Dow Jones editor was asked how he had the “unmiti-gated temerity” to attend the Wake, but hey, let’s be nice!)

Warm fuzzy feelings spread across three days and nights of convivial drinking (and eating), and it seemed the widespread desire

was to stop lamenting the heinous crimes of the past and to enjoy the friendships of the present.

Could it be that the Review was mellowing just as it died? Was its cult status as the seat of ferocious intelligence and vitriolic political incorrectness at last on the wane? Or was everyone just a little bit tired and emotional as the days and nights wore on?

Certainly the schedule was gruel-ling for those who stayed the course. Many former staffers and contrib-utors to the once great magazine pitched up at the Club on Friday,

A Protracted Farewell

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April 22. The Main Bar that night was, as a result, a heaving zoo.

Most of them then managed to pour themselves on to the ceremo-nial junk trip arranged to Po Toi the next day, a replay of the Derek Davies boat trips of old. The trippers report-ed that their day was one of catch-ing up on the years, even decades, gone by. It was a relaxed crew who adorned the bar that night.

The official Wake began on the Sunday night. Club staff must be commended for putting on a fantas-tic spread for the occasion.

Initial ceremonials were heart-warming. The central cog of the Review, Lily Kan, was rightly hon-oured for her work over the decades. She was given a framed cover of the

Review featuring herself in true Mor-gan Chua cartoon-style, as befits a legend in her own time.

Most recent former editor, David Plott, then gave a rendition of his views which were neither short nor wholly sweet. He sounded a cheer for the most recent decade of the Review and castigated Dow Jones directly for failing to devote adequate resources to market the magazine and to build circulation.

His claims that the magazine was not “dumbed down” in recent years were rather more controversial and sparked some spitting of tacks, at least in the ladies loo later on. But then, tribalism often does get messy.

One could go on into all the details of why and how the magazine died

and who is to blame. But few people that night were in the mood.

More important was the human dimension, stressed by former editor Philip Bowring. He reminded us of Arun Subramaniam, the Review’s man from Singapore who has done more time in prison for the magazine than anyone else, and Sayed Kamaluddin of Dacca, the longest-serving writer.

Thanks are due to Barry Wain for his brilliantly witty contribution. Poking fun was long a part of the real Review and the only complaint from the Wake is that there should have been more of that.

As for where regional media left after all this, we can only rely on one of the clichés of modern reporting: “Your guess is as good as mine,” said one insider. – Vaudine England.

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Journalists living dangerously

Rarely since the end of the Cold War have we experienced such a blatant deployment of Stalin-

ist-style media management as in Uzbekistan in May. The black art began with filling the state television airwaves with hours and hours of classical music.

Next in the bid to stop news of the unrest in Andizhan from reaching the outside world, the authorities shut the city down, ordered all new arrivals to register and threw out journalists with a reputation for being a nuisance And the excuse? Well apparently Andizhan is a dangerous place and those mar-vellous people in charge of security were concerned for our safety.

Obviously these caring actions had nothing to do with the massacre that was about to be committed. And the concern about the bodily safety of hacks was obviously a genuine reason for later preventing reporters from get-ting to the morgue to count bodies.

Besides who needs to visit the morgue when you can rely on Uzbek television for the official news? After all, it should know. The station is con-trolled by President Islam Karimov with the same cultural aplomb as the stuff served up by Kim Jong-il to the North Koreans. After broadcast-ing folklore programme after folk-lore programme, it broke into anoth-er programme about local folklore with a short announcement that 30 people had been killed by Islamic terrorists. Given his regime’s penchant for using deadly force to suppress pro-tests, and news that the death toll has exceeded 740 – some witnesses put it a great deal higher – one can only admire Karimov’s brass neck when he pleaded innocent.

***In Africa a Kenyan magistrate

has blocked a cameraman from suing the wife of Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki for allegedly assaulting him and breaking his camera. This was apparently Mrs Kibaki’s way of say-ing: “I don’t like the way you treat my husband.” A rather angry Lucy Kibaki, surrounded by muscle, stormed into the offices of the Nation Media Group and confiscated journalists’ cell phones, their cameras and notebooks and then allegedly thumped the cam-eraman and damaged his kit.

It just so happens that the melee erupted after critical media reporting of Kibaki’s attempts to spoil a farewell party for the outgoing country direc-tor of the World Bank. Apparently the party-goers were having too good of a time of it so he ordered a stop to the party.

***It would appear the Hong Kong

edition of a newspaper linked to the Falungong has been saved after a company stepped in to publish the daily when its previous printer, some say, bowed to political pressure from China and pulled the plug. Cheryl Ng, editor of the daily Epoch Times, told the local media that a new printing company had been found and agreed to work with them temporarily. But she declined to elaborate further. One fears that the independent Chinese-language New Tang Dynasty Television (NTDTV) may not be so lucky after Paris-based satellite provider Eutelsat decided to raise its fees.

Eutelsat has rejected previ-ous claims that it was attempting to silence NTDTV following pressure

from China, which has denounced NTDTV as a Falungong mouthpiece.

***And here’s to the columnist of a

Philippine tabloid who exchanged gunfire with two gunmen in another attack on a journalist in that country. Yes, we all know that hacks should not carry guns or participate in bat-tles, a hot topic in recent years given America’s preoccupation with Iraq and Afghanistan.

But let’s face facts. Outside the Middle East, the Philippines is the most dangerous place for journal-ists on the planet. As I mentioned in the last edition of The Correspondent, Reporters without Borders calculated that eight journalists were murdered there in 2004, many of them radio broadcasters who were “gunned down in retaliation for their work.”

Since January, another five jour-nalists have been killed and many more wounded.

One recent attack involved a gift-wrapped bomb sent to the home of a radio announcer in the south-ern Philippines. It exploded, killing a teenager and wounding another. Not one person has been convicted for the killings so perhaps we should not judge Pablo Hernandez from the Bul-gar (Expose) tabloid too harshly for shooting back when two men opened fire on him.

According to the Philippine police there is no evidence to support suggestions that journalists are being systematically targeted.

***Nor are they being targeted in

Nepal. Well, that’s what King Gyanen-dra and his band of loyal cops reck-on despite a rare protest by inter-national photographers who staged a march demanding action against police who beat them up while cover-ing a previous demonstration.

It was a silent march with a nice bit of artistic flair added in. The demonstrators waved placards bear-ing cartoons of a Srinigar policeman smashing a photographer’s camera with a gun.

STILETTOSTILETTOSTILETTOSTILETTOSTILETTOBY MAX KOLBE

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The success of the FCC Charity Ball over the past few years has been

a team effort. Dozens, if not hundreds, of people have given freely of their time, expertise and talent. In this edition of The Correspondent we talk to two of the individuals who have made invaluable contributions: Hong Kong artist and radio celebrity Mary Cheung, and the hostess of CNN’s Talk Asia, Lorraine Hahn.

Mary, the hostess of Metro Radio’s Merry Mary radio show, is the inspiration behind the Ball’s goal of helping children of the Po Leung Kuk gain access to tertiary education.

Mary herself was a resident of the Kuk, which was found-ed in 1878 to protect young-sters and women from abduc-tion, slavery and worse. Today, it offers a safety net for the under-privileged. At the age of just six years old, Mary was rescued from the streets of Hong Kong, where she had survived for about two years, and taken to the Kuk’s residential home in Causeway Bay. She spent 14 years there. Today, she still calls the Kuk home, and the hundreds of children in care there, her sisters and brothers.

“I always consider myself lucky that I was sent to the Po Leung Kuk,” Mary says. But she does have one regret. There was no way for her attend university after she left the Kuk’s care at the age of 20. Even so, she went on to become Miss Hong Kong 1975, an internationally-known painter and photographer, the owner of her own media consulting and training business, as well as the proud mother of two.

As for her education, she also succeeded there, too. She obtained a degree in marketing from what is now

the Hong Kong Polytechnic University after attending classes for years part-time as an adult.

She values that education, but is wistful about having missed the social and civic activities that her young-er classmates – those who enrolled full-time right after secondary school – enjoyed. “University life is not just studying. It’s (also about) social skills, preparations for life,” Mary says.

So when FCC Charity Ball co-founder Dave Garcia mentioned to Mary that the Board of Governors was considering a charity event, she had an idea ready for him. Raising funds to help disadvantaged stu-dents from the Kuk’s residences and secondary schools go to university and college.

And that’s where Lorraine Hahn came into the action. She agreed to become the Ball Committee’s volun-teer public spokeswoman. Her inter-

national media profile, and what she modestly calls her “horrible Canton-ese” proved to be great boosts to the fund-raising efforts. Lorraine, a Canadian by way of Singapore, has

spent her journalism career in Hong Kong, and in addition to hosting CNN’s popular Talk Asia show, also has her own media consulting business.

The first Ball, in 2002, raised enough money to provide scholarships for four young-sters. But six months later, when the scholarship com-mittee interviewed the candi-dates, they found six who truly deserved help – including one hoped to complete the five-years required for a career in medicine.

Just before the 2003 Ball, Mary invited Lorraine on to her radio show to talk about the Kuk and the FCC’s big bash. As they chatted, the topic of the two students who couldn’t get scholarships came up. Very quickly, there was a phone call to the Metro Radio studios. In a gesture that is typical of

Hong Kong’s generosity, a listener was offering HK$400,000 – enough to pay for the education of the other two students – including the would-be doctor.

“To this day, I really think that whoever donated that $400,000 really just wanted to get me off the air,” Lor-raine cracks.

Last year, Mary again invited Lor-raine to her show for a chat about the Ball, and as a result $150,000 more was added to the scholarship fund, Mary says. And both women have tapped their vast lists of friends and wealth of contacts to buy raffle tick-ets or contribute to the Ball in other ways.

Lorraine says she finds the effort worthwhile – because the money is going to kids who need the help. “You’re giving them a future,” she says.

Mary, though, says she hopes that the Charity Ball’s efforts also go a

Hands On Help

Mary Cheung

Charity Fund

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20

A group of members gathered at the Po Leung Kuk headquarters

in March for the launch of the FCC Language Centre. Short speeches and some wonderful performances by children that highlighted their English and Mandarin skills were followed by an official ribbon-cut-ting ceremony, as Thomas Crampton recounts.

After six months of hard work by FCC and Po Leung Kuk volun-teers and staff, the language centre designed to provide many under-privileged Hong Kong children with a brighter future is up and running, FCC Charity Fund Co-Chairman David Garcia told those gathered.

The FCC Language Training Pro-gramme at the Po Leung Kuk aims to equip youngsters in the care of the kuk with the language skills needed for careers in Hong Kong and China in the 21st century by ensuring they can read and write in both Chinese and English and speak Cantonese, Putonghua and English.

In practical terms, the pro-gramme has:

• Supplied computers• Started to provide books, maga-

zines and comics.• Hired storytellers so that every

child in residential care of the Po Leung Kuk can hear tales in English or Putonghua at least two nights a week.

• Hired native English teach-ers, native Putonghua teachers and teaching assistants for face-to-face teaching of kindergarten and young-er primary school pupils.

This is only the first step. So far the programme has raised a total of HK$1.4 million for 2005. The FCC Char-ity Fund provided funds of $550,000, the Po Leung Kuk has matched that donation and the JP Morgan Chase Foundation has donated $400,000. This was enough to launch the pro-gramme for the younger kids but not for the older ones.

For now, face-to-face language teaching for older primary school pupils (approximately 100 kids aged 9 to 12) and the 60 or so youngsters in secondary school aged 13 to 18 remains unfunded. It is estimated that to extend the programme to all of them will require an annual expenditure of $3.1 million.

The younger kids, some 300 of them ranging up to the age of about nine, however, will benefit from a storytelling programme and the face-to-face language lessons. They will receive hands-on, and hopefully fun, exposure to language from two storytellers who will visit each dor-mitory twice a week. Five part-time storytellers will rotate around the fifteen “small group” homes out-side the Kuk’s main premises where kids live with “housemothers” and

“housefathers” telling stories on two nights each week. The storytellers are provided with laptop computers, plus a stock of books and comics, cassette tapes and CD-ROMs.

The children will also get three hours of face-to-face teaching in English and one hour of face-to-face teaching in Putonghua each week, supplemented by homework, often online as children get older, and supplemented by storytelling.

The Hong Kong Polytechnic Uni-versity has agreed to become aca-demic partner of the Language Train-ing programme to safeguard stan-dards. It has already given invalu-able assistance with the curriculum, staff selection and resources as well as tools to evaluate and verify the improvement in language skills.

In order to extend the programme to the older children, the FCC Charity Committee is continuing to approach corporate donors. It also plans to approach the Partnership Fund for the Disadvantaged, announced in the Chief Executive’s Policy Address in January. That fund has earmarked $200 million to promote a tripartite partnership between the Govern-ment, the business community and the welfare sector to help the disad-vantaged.

For further information please contact the FCC Charity Fund. E-mail: [email protected]. Tel: 2521 2814.

bit beyond opening wallets. She hopes the Ball will encourage FCC members to become more involved with the Kuk’s children. She urges members to join the many volunteers who visit the Kuk to play with toddlers, read to children or tutor students. “Attention, caring, love, I think this what our kids need,” she says.

And many of the older ones can use a helping hand in entering adult life. Mary says she appreciates the efforts of FCC members to find internships and

mentoring partners for students leav-ing the Kuk’s schools and residential facilities

Lorraine Hahn and Mary Cheung say the FCC Charity Ball is about more than dancing all night at the biggest party of the year. They see it as something natu-ral and easy to do – helping the FCC help kids. Although Lorraine does wish she could avoid one really tough part of the job – “having the sweat of the one hour of a Cantonese interview” on Mary’s radio programme.

FCC Language Training Centre Opens

Lorraine Hahn

Charity Fund

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005

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THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 200522

His body was wasted by cancer, but Dr Raymond Lasserre’s mind was as alert as ever, and his wise,

soft-voiced conversation was laced with humour, with no trace of fear or self-pity. He spoke to The Correspondent a few days ahead of the opening of the FCC exhibi-tion displaying his remarkable photo-graphs.

Dr Lasserre opened the interview by apologising for his lack of mobility – he was stretched out on his bed in his Tsim Sha Tsui flat, spectacles and medica-tion close at hand. He knew he was near death but he said, with humbling convic-tion: “I am very serene about this. I have accepted it.”

He then remarked that he had led “an unusual life for a Swiss physician”, a

typical understatement for this extraor-dinary human being, who as well as being a physician has been a freelance journalist and author, as well as a gifted photographer.

Trained in Geneva, he shunned the soft option of working in a medical prac-tice in Switzerland. Instead, since shortly after World War II, he set forth, mainly to the Third World, working for health, charitable and research organisations, dispensing care to the needy and less privileged.

Even at the age of 82 and racked by disease, he remained an active member of the Board of Médecins sans Frontières in Hong Kong.

Throughout the interview, Dr Lasserre was far more interested in discussing the

Dr Lasserre (centre) at the Shell Hospital in Sumatra, 1966.

An Unusual Life

JOAN BOIVIN

On the wall

Page 23: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 23

world’s medical problems than his own. In particular he lamented that the amazing technological advanc-es achieved in medicine had been matched by a decline in human con-tact between physician and patient. He cited his own experience in a Geneva hospital where, admitted for an emergency cancer operation, he spent 12 hours undergoing tests but during that time had virtually no personal contact with the staff treat-ing him.

“Was it a hospital or a garage? My conclusion was that it was a garage. Patients are very well repaired, but they are repaired as if they were a car, not like they were human beings with their own feelings.”

Public letter-writer, Tinerhir, Morrocco,

1955 (top).

Project Concern, Hong Kong, 1967-74

(bottom).

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THE CORRESPONDENT MARCH/APRIL 200524

In what he described as an amusing experience in Hong Kong’s Queen Elizabeth hospital, which he also entered for treat-ment, a hospital staff member placed his food tray at the end of the bed – even though he was far too weak to reach it.

He said he felt like a god in Greek mythology, nourished by the fumes from sacrificed ani-mals.

After a while, the tray was removed untouched and Dr Lasserre had to go hungry. “It was the first and last time I felt I am Zeus.”

He said impersonal medical care was prompting terminally ill patients to shun hospitals, and increasing numbers of peo-ple were inclined to try out treat-ments such as aromatherapy, because at least they received

Project Concern Hong Kong, Kai Tak Nullah, 1967-74.

On the wall

Page 25: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 25

personal attention. “It may not do them much good but at least they will be comforted and feel more secure.”

Finally Dr Lasserre asked when the interview would appear in The Correspondent. When told it would be in the May/June issue his response was: “So, I will not see it, probably.”

He was right. He missed the opening of his FCC exhibition on April 6 because he had to return to hospital. And just minutes after the welcoming speeches had ended at the launch of the exhibition of his superb images, Dr Raymond Lasserre’s “unusual life” ended.

Dr Lasserre’s book, Médecin Sur Tous Fronts, is on sale at the Club and at Parenthèse French bookshop, 2/F, 14 Wellington Street.

Rice fields near Kathmandu, Nepal, 1961.

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THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 27

I enjoyed Wendy McTavish’s trip back in time. We overlapped in Hong Kong so I can relate person-

ally to some of her memories and adventures.

But for those whose experience in Hong Kong is shorter, the McTavish adventures, their trials and tribulations can be a real eye-opener. Hong Kong was a very different place for expats in the 1960s and this short personal his-tory is almost as good as reminiscing with Wendy in the Main Bar.

Peter and Wendy McTavish’s first arrival in Hong Kong was by ship, in those days a mode taken by many young Australians looking for adven-ture. They sailed here on the good ship Galileo in 1966 and had their excitement tinged with the romance of arriving in the Fragrant Harbour the proper way – by sea. They arrived for their new life with no jobs and their life savings: £100.

Hong Kong of four decades ago was very colonial, very structured. I have no particular memories of my time at Chungking Mansions, but Peter and Wendy McTavish made friends with the Shanghainese family who ran their guesthouse and upon moving across the harbour, their first step up the ladder, were invited back for a Chinese New Year dinner.

Back then, the McTavishs were able get instant credit at a Mid-Levels corner store (Charn Kee) “in spite of (them) not knowing us”. That sort of personal business and trust is very rare nowadays since the proliferation of supermarkets and credit cards.

What still exists in Hong Kong is the entrepreneurial attitude to busi-ness, and the opportunities it pres-ents. “Peter had gone from being a

regional insurance inspector in out-back Queensland to the manager of a one-man insurance brokerage firm in cosmopolitan Hong Kong….at our young age in our home country, we would never had had access to vice presidents and presidents of com-panies. Senior executives and any celebrities or attractive personalities would be entertained by employ-ees higher up the food chain.”

Compare the above comment with one some four decades and 200 pages later: “Peter and I would never have suited the corporate life no matter how much we may have envied its recipients on occasion. We liked the freedoms available to the small entrepreneur; freedom to take risk, exercise independence, start work when we like and finish when we like; to go on vacation as often as we like for as long as we like in the knowl-edge that the only person with his foot on our neck is the client. We often paid a price for this.”

One price the family paid was the problems of a split family. Several times, Wendy went back to Australia with the children while Peter hung on in Hong Kong nurturing one of the five different companies he set up.

Wendy pulls no punches. Speak-ing of her latest return to Hong Kong: “Both Peter and I have some adjust-ments to make. Three years of living

apart, despite frequent visits, means we are thinking as individuals instead of as a couple. We have to consider each others’ needs and tastes again.” That the McTavishes raised three fine kids who have gone out into the world, and are still together, means the sacri-fices were worth it. Or as Wendy puts it: “Peter and I have come full circle. Our children have left home and we are a couple again and still in Hong Kong.” Wendy pointed out that that circle “included 17 major moves”.

Wendy is quite hard on herself as well. She speaks of pushing for an apartment they couldn’t afford and of tearing into Peter when he’s been out with the boys. In the chapter called

“Hard Yards” late in the book, Wendy’s lead is: “If in reading so far, you’ve found this book amusing now is the time to quit. The funny stories are few and far between from here on in. If however, you have viewed me as a spoiled bitch or silly cow then read on because you will see that I get my comeuppance and you can smile quietly to yourself.”

For those us who have known Wendy over the years as I have, she is indeed a tough lady. One who can be kind and caring one day but acerbic and angry the next. I always thought

it was the pressure of work because through it all, Wendy was, and still is, an astute businesswoman. I was correct. Her first business venture was Expat Junque which dealt in used furniture. She then started Expat Services, a prop-erty company. The tales that she relates of being in business in Hong Kong, of the successes and at the same time the horrific problems – particularly expat staff coming in to learn the business then quitting to start a competitive business, complete with poached staff

Long-time FCC member Wendy McTavish has written a very “opinionated” memoir of her four decades in Hong Kong. Saul Lockhart reviews the book.

Shallow Roots

Books

Expat: Opinionated memories of forty years in Hong Kong

By Wendy McTavish

Inkstone Press (A division of Chameleon Press), Hong Kong, 2005

ISBN: 962-86740-5-6

PB.250 pages. HK$175

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THE CORRESPONDENT MARCH/APRIL 200528

Books

A while back, Truss’s book, Eat Shoots & Leaves – The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punc-

tuation, would have been of interest only to professional writers and edi-tors. But the fact that it shot to the New York Times best-seller list proves that more people than ever are inter-ested in words.

By default of the technological age we live in, you may find yourself a de facto writer and/or editor. For those starting out, or for those who haven’t had the benefit of hands-on professional training, why not learn to do it properly? Not only will you learn to avoid the common pitfalls but your general writing – everything from reports and articles to diaries and letters – will improve. And if the muse strikes, you may even give yourself a step-up should you want to write a book that doesn’t make the copy editor shudder. There is no magic potion or pill, but there are books available.

The Editor’s Companion by Janet Mackenzie, published by Cambridge University Press, is a case in point. Writers as well as editors – and that includes those editing themselves in the first instance – will find the book useful. The book ranges from basic

editing tips (including rules, common errors, lots of how-to’s) to chapters on books and technology.

If you are going to get serious about this writing business, The Cam-bridge Guide to English Usage by Pro-fessor Pam Peters of Australia’s Mac-quarie University (the book is about mainstream English, not Strine, just in case there’s any doubt) is a use-ful asset to any library. This book includes everything from style and structure of writing to editorial style to basic grammar, set out in a diction-ary format.

Then there is Style, published by News Ltd, for toilers on Rupert Mur-doch’s 120 or so newspapers around the world. There is an interesting yarn behind the just published third edi-tion. The company’s editorial training manager, Lucinda Duckett, noticed that she was getting more and more

requests from outside the company for the handbook. She reckoned there was a much wider market for Style than just Rupert’s army of journos, so she alerted News Custom Publishing and the book is now available to the public.

Style answered one mystifying practice for a newcomer like me to Down Underland. That is the absence of apostrophes in so many place names. Sydney’s Kings Cross and Crows Nest are two cases in point. Well, it seems that the Geographical Names Board of New South Wales deemed apostrophes unnecessary in place names. I can only assume that the decree for Australia’s most popu-lated state has taken hold across the country.

If you’re going to be professional about this, you will also need to know just where you stand with regards to the law. So, to find your way around copyright, defamation, contracts and money matters, turn to Between the Lines: A Legal Guide for Writers and Illustrators by Lynne Spender.

Armed with these tomes, or tomes like these, you will become a professional in your writing and editing, regardless what your profes-sion is. And most important, you will learn to take responsibility for your words.

The Editor’s CompanionBy Janet MackenzieCambridge University PressPB. 280 pages. HK$240 (approx)ISBN: 0-5216056-9-5www.cambridge.edu.au

The Cambridge Guide to English UsageBy Pam PetersCambridge University PressHB. 620 pages. HK$450 (approx)ISBN: 0-52162-181Xwww.cambridge.edu.au

StyleEdited by Kim LockwoodNews Custom PublishingPB. 216 pages. HK$150 (approx)ISBN: 1-876176-54-7www.hwt.com.au

Between the Lines: A Legal Guide for Writers and Illustrators By Lynne SpenderKeesing Press(Australian Society of Authors) PB. 272 pages. HK$240 (approx)ISBN: 0-9752083-0-6www.asauthors.org

– would be enough to make someone a bit tetchy now and again.

How she came to write her memoirs is also an interesting yarn. After admit-ting to a need to “reinvent herself” she credits Peter, in a backhanded compli-ment, with her transformation into a writer. He “unaccountably resent(ed)

me filling my days with bridge, (and paid) for me to attend a writing semi-nar conducted by well-known Hong Kong author (and fellow FCCer) Nury Vittachi.” The rest is history.

Lest you get carried away with the romance of this adventure, Wendy brings us all back to earth with a

thump in her closing paragraph: “Now we spend our time between Hong Kong and Australia. We are never completely happy in either place. We need both yet we cannot be truly Hongkongian because we are not Chinese, or truly Australian because we spent so many years out of our country.”

Ever since Lynne Truss’s packed-out luncheon talk at the FCC in August 2004, which had enough overflow to have her speak again at dinner, former Correspondent editor Saul Lockhart has been musing about the concept of everyone being an editor thanks to the magic of modern technology.

Easier Said Than Done

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THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 29

It is appropriate for a man with such strongly-held and often stridently-expressed opinions as Kevin that

his landmark 20th title celebrates the voice of the ordinary man and woman. Points of View; A Century of Letters to the Editor of the South China Morning Post, is a revealing and insightful collection of thoughts, opinions and demands expressed by Hong Kong residents over the decades.

“Researching this book was both fascinating and fun,” Kevin said. “Some of the readers who wrote indignantly in 1904 about dirty rickshaws could well be the grandfathers of readers in 2004 who complained about grubby taxis.”

Kevin’s career has been by any standards a long, varied and, at times, very colourful one. It’s undeniably worthy of its own dedicated edition in the (seemingly unlikely) event that he ever decides to retire.

The work ethic of this self-described “hack” would put many of us to shame. Rising before dawn, Sinclair’s creative juices at this unci-vilised hour result in productivity that many of us mere, and still uncon-scious, mortals can only dream of – and that is before alarms rudely awaken us at a more luxurious hour.

By any standards, the former copy-boy from Wellington has been a major contributing force to Hong Kong jour-nalism since his arrival in 1968, when he was appointed news editor of the now long-defunct newspaper, The Star. He went on to hold similar posi-tions at both the Hong Kong Standard and the South China Morning Post.

Since embarking on a freelance career in 1986, Sinclair has contin-ued to report Hong Kong news, while voicing community concerns via his

newspaper columns and features. He has discoursed on the finer points of food and wine, authored books and to top it off, in 1993, together with public relations practitioner Susan Field, he launched the region’s first dedicated hotel trade publication, Asian Hotelier. Quite a career for an average person let alone one who underwent radical throat surgery for cancer in 1979.

In addition to his print journalism writing, Kevin has recently added a high-tech outlet to his repertoire. He now hosts twice-weekly real-time On the Spot chat sessions with South China Morning Post subscribers. One enthusiast contributes regularly from Arkansas to the Wednesday morning session, a cross between a debate, a dialogue and agony aunt session.

His Friday sessions concentrate on topics close to his heart and stomach. Eating and drinking and, by extension, coverage of Hong Kong’s burgeoning, if

somewhat bureaucratically-governed hospitality industry. A replacement, for his Sunday wine column, Kevin has nevertheless not abandoned his personal quest – the tracking down of decently-priced, readily-available and very quaffable wines.

Kevin’s professionalism was acknowledged in 1983, when, accom-panied by his wife Kit and children David and Kiri, he travelled to Buck-ingham Palace to receive his MBE (Member in The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) from the Queen. The award was made for services to journalism in Hong Kong.

Over the years Kevin has witnessed considerable change in Hong Kong. So did Points of View reveal anything surprising about the place, its people and its development into one of the powerhouses of Asia?

“Some readers were proud of Hong Kong, others shamed. Some were happy, some depressed, some boister-ously confident, others fearful of the future. Some seemed simply mad. Some complaints seem universal and eternal. What bothered people 100 years ago and caused them to dip their steel nibs into inkwells were issues like transport, education, hous-ing, the cost of living and the ineffec-tive actions and policies of the Hong Kong government.”

“What’s new?” Sinclair laughs. “In 1906, people didn’t write about terror-ism, but correspondents had ample scope to vent their anger and impo-tence about the persistent threat of piracy against vessels on the China coastal trade and river steamers head-ing up the Pearl.”

Long before SARS, the community was justifiably fearful of tuberculosis, diphtheria, cholera, the plague, lep-rosy and influenza. Epidemics peri-odically afflicted the city.

Kevin’s more sentimental side, how-ever, reveals itself by way of his final comment on this latest publication.

“I am, however, still pondering what response ‘Broken Hearts’ got in reply to his 1936 letter in which he asked: ‘What is love’?”

Points of ViewJournalist, publisher, author and FCC member Kevin Sinclair has just published his 20th book, making him one of Hong Kong’s most prolific writers. Suzanne Dennis talks to Kevin about his book and how he manages to fit so much into his workday.

Kevin Sinclair: 20 titles under his belt

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THE CORRESPONDENT MARCH/APRIL 200530

Travel

The ladies did not take much convincing. That alone should have been suspicious, but I

suspect that our better halves – who dubbed us the “The Three Stooges” – were happy to get us out from underfoot for a spell.

Be that as it may, our oft-dis-cussed reunion-on-the road became a reality when we stepped aboard The Ghan, short for Afghan (see box), in Adelaide’s Keswick Station for the 48-hour rail odyssey to Darwin, some 2,979-kilometres north in the Top End of Australia.

We had talked longingly of anoth-er such trip after our first foray into the unknown in 1992 when we drove the Alaskan-Canadian Highway north to south in convoy for a camping

adventure. On that occasion we had two wives plus various kids in tow.

We Three Stooges consisted of Alan Daniels, formerly with the old Sunday Post-Herald in Hong Kong in the late 1960s and the recently retired Transport & Tourism Editor the Van-couver Sun. Alan is now Editor-in-Chief of Canada’s Nationwide News Service. Then there was Ashley Ford, the Asian Business and Travel Columnist for the Vancouver Province. And finally, yours truly.

Our journey started in Sydney with an overnight journey to Adelaide on the Indian Pacific, the famed East-West rail link to Perth which crosses the Nullabor Desert on what is billed as the longest stretch of straight track in the world – 478 kilometres long.

Three veteran Asia hands partake of

Australia’s newest attraction, The Ghan,

all by their lonesomes. Former Correspondent editor Saul Lockhart

reports

On the road again – at last

AFP/ JAMIE MACDONALD

Page 30: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 31

(The Melbourne-Adelaide route is called The Overland.)

As all three routes are owned by the same company, Great Southern Railway, which owns the cars and leases the locomotives and track, they are interlinked. The 24-hour jaunt to Adelaide gave us a chance to familia-rise ourselves with rail travel Aussie-style. We found it to be laid-back and tinged with humour, as well as being efficient. It also helped to acclimatise our natural vibrations with those of a train.

Our trip on The “Legendary” Ghan, as it is known Down Under, began upon our arrival in Adelaide, a couple hours before we were due to depart. There on the platform to greet us “already weary” travellers – we had celebrated our first night of freedom with unbridled enthusiasm – were ex-FCCer Paul Lloyd, also formerly of the Sunday Post-Herald, and currently with the Adelaide Advertiser, and ace FCC photographer Bob Davis, coinciden-tally on assignment there.

A couple or three cold tinnies to wash away the trail dust and pre-pare our palates for bottles of fine South Australian bubbly, all courtesy of Lloyd’s tailgate bar in the parking lot next to The Ghan, were just what we needed to set the pace for our journey to the Top End.

The chance to relax in air-condi-tioned comfort, supping on fine foods and quaffing equally fine Australian vino on a transcontinental rail jour-ney with some of the most spectacu-lar scenery shooting by, is something not to be missed.

We considered our Ghan expedi-tion to be an adventure. But let’s face it, it only takes one look at that terrain zipping by to realise how pampered we were compared to the explorers hoofing it across the country, and the settlers of the early 20th century who travelled by horse or camel. Regard-less of the class one travels, the Ghan is comfort personified. Rail travel is more comfortable than its counter-part in the air, the food’s better and it is more fun!

As befits venerable members of the Fourth Estate, we chose to be pampered in the Gold Kangaroo Ser-vice which meant we had berths and access to a lounge/bar car and a din-ing car. Had we had the moola, we could have taken a suite, or travelled in the Chairman’s Car, which sleeps eight and has its own lounge and din-ing facilities. Or had we been seriously loaded we could have taken over the entire train.

Alas, we’re poor journos and could not partake of such ultra-luxury. But we did travel one step up from the Red

Kangaroo Service, which is divided in two: daynighter (aeroplane) seats or a sleeper cabin, plus a Lounge Car and a Diner/Buffet Car.

When it came to dining, we chose the second sitting because it allowed us to linger both before dinner in the lounge and after dinner at the table – and linger we did with the port and cheese. There was white linen and proper silverware (none of that plas-tic airline cutlery). I’d like to say we planned this civilised manner of din-ing but what really happened is that in the late afternoon, well before the first

The most popular stopover on The Ghan is Alice Springs because from there

you can spend three to four days visiting Australia’s most famous landmark, Uluru (Ayers Rock), some 450 km southwest of the city. (Don’t panic about the distance – the road is excellent and most of it does not have a speed limit.)

Located deep in Australia’s Red Cen-tre 2,200 km from Sydney, the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park is a World Heritage Listed Site. The beauty of Ayers Rock is not to be missed. In practical terms that means views at sunrise and sunset. Ayers Rock/Uluru rises a steep 348 metres into the sky, but it is estimated that most of it is underground, down to a depth of

6 km. Of more practical interest is its 9.4 km perimeter all of which is walkable. Up close, Uluru has the pockmarked surface of a red moonscape. From a distance, it is a flat-topped, red-hued giant that changes colour with the passage of the sun.

Ayers Rock was named in 1873 by William Christie Goss, the first European to reach the area. He named after Sir Henry Ayer, the Chief Secretary of South Australia. In October 26, 1985, the rock was handed back to its original owners, the Anangu tribe, who reverted to the Aboriginal name, Uluru. These days, you’ll find both names in use to describe the monolith. – Saul Lockhart

Stopover: Uluru

Page 31: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

Check out the wide range of FCC products

Computer bag . . . . . . . . . . . .$165

Blue ball pen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15

Plastic ball pen . . . . . . . . . . . $1.50

Silver ball pen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $68

Document case . . . . . . . . . . .$110

FCC Card with greeting . . . . $35

FCC Card blank . . . . . . . . . . . . $35

Disposable lighter . . . . . . . . . . $5

Fleece smock . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$280

Keyholder & ring . . . . . . . . . . . $30

Plated keyholder . . . . . . . . . . . $30

Gold Zippo lighter . . . . . . . .$150

Luggage tag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $60

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Reporter’s notebook . . . . . . . $10

Polo shirt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$140

Stonewashed shirt . . . . . . . .$115

Stonewashed shorts . . . . . .$110

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New Umbrella (regular) . . . $68

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Wallet – hot stamped . . . . .$125

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Pierre Quioc Stole . . . . . . . .$280

Pierre Quioc Scarf . . . . . . . . . . $95

FCC Video – NTSC . . . . . . . . .$310

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FCC lithograph . . . . . . . . . . . .$800

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I Love HK postcard . . . . . .$13.50

I Love HK poster . . . . . . . . . .$250

FictionCleaning HouseBarry Kalb . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $150OutloudAnthology of poetry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $80

Non-fictionABC of Dogs Arthur Hacker – Cartoons . . . . . . . . . . . . $45ABC of Hong Kong Arthur Hacker – Cartoons . . . . . . . . . . . . $45Asia’s Finest Marchs On Kevin Sinclair & Nelson Cheung . . . . . $200At the EpicentreChristine Loh & Civic Exchange . . . . . . $150Baby Fun Anne Knecht-Boyer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $165Bars of Steel Brandon Royal & Paul Strahan . . . . . . . . $68Captain if CapturedClare Hollingworth – Biography . . . . . $299China Illustrated Arthur Hacker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $395Custom Maid for New World DisorderPeter de Krassel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $155Hong Kong MurdersKate Whitehead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $125 I was Misquoted Ted Thomas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $99Macau WatercolourMurray Zanoni . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $350One Hand Teo FingersGavin Coates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $145Pocket Guide to Golfing Philippines 2005Robin Moyer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $98 Polar Power - Bilingual versionRebecca Lee – Photography . . . . . . . . . $170Shanghai Through the Panoramic EyeFumio Okada . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $240Stretch Your LifeTim Noonan & Chris Watts . . . . . . . . . . . $158The Emperor’s Old ClothesJake van der Kamp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $129The Little Red Writing BookBrandon Royal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $168The Poles Declaration - Bilingual VersionRebecca Lee – Photography . . . . . . . . . $170The Quest of Noel CroucherVaudine England – Biography . . . . . . . $185

CDsAllen Youngblood CD Allen Youngblood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $110 Digital Cutup Lounge vs Allen YoungbloodAllen Youngblood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $110

FCC Collection

Computer bag: $165

Bowtie: $145Bowtie: $145

Belt: $110Belt: $110110Belt: $110

Computer

Photographer’s vest: $255

32 THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005

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THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 33

Travel

FCC Collection

www.bangkokair.com

sitting, we rolled up into the lounge car for a cleansing ale or three, and lingered away until our 8 o’clock sitting.

The menus offered a wide range of options, ranging from Aussie favourites such as leg of lamb for dinner or chicken pie for lunch, to ambitious Asian dishes such as steamed kingfish with lemongrass-coconut sauce (din-ner) or beef rending (lunch), all prepared fresh by chefs en route. Desserts could range from a chocolate mousse to a parfait. Though it was not on the menu, we managed to score a selection of cheese to go with our port which certainly was on the menu. The tucker was good as was the dining car service.

The Ghan’s Gold Kan-garoo cabins are small but efficient. In the twin accom-modation, the upper berth packs away during the day and there is a bathroom with a pull-down sink, pull-down toilet, and shower. Remind you of the old Pull-man cars? It should. These are refurbished Pullmans. My only criticism would be the lack of domed observation cars. This Red Centre of Australia is a landscape that cries out for special viewing cars.

At the beginning, some of the European and American passengers on board were critical, comparing The Ghan unfavourably with the Orient Express. It is an expensive mode of travel, to say nothing of the cost of getting to Australia in the first place. Great Southern Railway now makes it very clear – and did so to us in a background briefing – that their train is not a Down Under version of the Orient Express and it has no intention of becoming so. Rather, The Ghan is a “true-blue” Aussie-style train, so do not let the art deco design on all the advertising bumf confuse you.

The Legendary GhanLinking the north and south by rail was a dream dating back to Federation in 1901 and the first link came in 1929 with the Adelaide-Alice Springs Service. More than a century later, on February 1, 2004, the Alice to Darwin route opened. The name Ghan comes from Afghan, the first cameleers in the Top End. Those beasts of burden opened the north and there are still 600,000-700,000 feral camels roaming the area. (And you can take a camel ride at Alice Springs or Uluru if you want to see just how uncomfortable that mode of transport is.)

Website: www.gsr.com.au/ghan/index.htm for the latest infor-mation and bookings.Air links: www.qantas.com.au and www.virginblue.com.au

The Ghan is a “true-blue” Aussie-style

train not a Down Under version of the Orient

Express

Page 33: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 200534

Feature

Picture Mr and Mrs Smith and their six-year-old daughter, Suzie, from Cairo, Illinois. They

have just finished their dream vaca-tion touring Britain on a motor coach. A London taxi deposits them at Heath-row Terminal 3 where they check in for their flight home. They hand over their bags to the counter agent, take their boarding passes and proceed through immigration and customs to their departure gate where they board their on-time flight and return to the comforts of middle America without incident.

Their bags are not so lucky. In an honest mistake, the counter agent directs their luggage not to the Ameri-can cornbelt , but to the capital of Egypt, where it festers in a storage room long enough for its legal status to change from “Lost” to “Unclaimed”.

At this point, Mr Smith’s new sports jacket and slacks, his wife’s best pants suit and sensible shoes and little Suz-ie’s favourite stuffed bear and well-

thumbed copy of It Takes a Village, emerge along with the unclaimed baggage of other unfortunates from around the planet at a warehouse-sized store on the edge of a small agreeable town in the hilly northeast corner of Alabama, USA. The store is named, appropriately, The Unclaimed Baggage Center. The town is Scotts-boro.

The Unclaimed Baggage Center occupies a city block of floor space and has been selling the lost belong-ings of the world’s unhappy air pas-sengers since 1970. During that time, shoppers from every American state and more than 30 other countries have travelled to Scottsboro to comb through the loot.

Entering the Center from its abun-dant parking lot filled with chartered buses, you walk under a gazebo-shaped archway embellished with the names of the world’s popular travel destinations, like Cairo. Anyone who has ever entrusted their possessions

to an airline, must, upon entering this shopping sanctum, feel a slight twinge of affinity for the former own-ers of the thousands upon thousands of pieces of merchandise on sale. With more than a million items pass-ing through the Center annually, it is a fair guess that most serious frequent flyers have contributed.

So many dispossessed travellers have contracted the Center to ask if it can help them find their goods that the Center’s website responds under its FAQ. The short answer is: regret-fully no. “By the time luggage reaches us, every effort has been made by the airline to find the rightful owners,” it states. This takes three to four months. “That means the baggage that arrives at The Unclaimed Baggage Center is anonymous and up to 120 days past the travel date. Further, the volume of products coming through our store on a daily basis – much of it bought by shoppers within hours of reaching the sales floor – would make it a virtual impossibility to track any one item.”

Rough translation: Once it gets here, it’s not your stuff any more. A couple of exceptions to this hard rule were a misplaced Space Shuttle cam-era, which was returned to NASA, and an overlooked F16 fighter jet guidance system, which was returned to the U.S. Navy. I know…don’t ask!

Other people’s luggageSince leaving Hong Kong, Ken Jackson has been dividing his time between rural southwest Englandand even more rural southeast America. It was inAmerica that he discovered what happens to lostairline luggage

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THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 35

However the goods arrive, the Cen-ter has well-organised them for shop-pers’ convenience. It distributes a helpful Store Directory, which shows bargain hunters where to find what they are looking for, and if that fails there is even a concierge service for especially tricky requests.

Among the most popular items at the Center are cameras – just about every tourist takes one along. I don’t know what happens to the undevel-oped snaps of the family at the beach, or the tree-line, boulevard leading toward Notre Dame Cathedral, or Uncle Mack chugging that jug of margaritas, but by the time the cameras go into the Center’s display cabinets, those recorded memories are forever gone.

Near the cameras, lost spectacles are sold. In fact so much lost eye-wear is sold the section is divided between designer eyewear and ordi-nary eyewear. Why so many travel-lers would put their glasses in their checked luggage is one of the many imponderable questions the Center inspires. Another important section near the eyewear and the cameras is devoted to sporting goods. Ski-ing equipment predominates and one seasoned shopper explained: “You can get some really good deals on skis here. These Alabama folks may know everything there is to know about pricing Minoltas and Nikons, but they don’t do a lot of snow skiing.”

A former employee told me that the Center once found the ash remains of someone’s dearly departed. Presum-ably whoever gave grandpa to the baggage handlers wasn’t too happy with the will.

Jewellery is extremely popular at the Center. In fact the web site reports finding a 41-carat emerald and a 5.8-carat diamond ring in lost bags. Whoever checked that diamond ring cleverly concealed it in a sock to foil larcenous baggage handlers, but somehow still lost it…go figure. Anyway, even the less illustrious jew-ellery on regular offer is pretty stun-ning. The array of gold bracelets and necklaces, gemstones and watches

could readily be found on the shelves of top-rate jewellers. The shoppers at this counter show a different level of intensity and sophistication than the ones sorting through other people’s baseball caps in the next room. For one thing, no one is using a jeweller’s loupe to examine the stitching on the Al Unser Racing Team cap.

From scouring the items like jewel-lery, cameras and eyeglasses, items which had no business being checked in in the first place, the bargain hunt-ers can move into the much larger clothing sections. Every conceiv-able item of formal, casual, sporty and intimate apparel is arranged by size. Women can browse for cocktail dresses, business suits, blouses, skirts,

sportswear or that 34C lacey red bras-siere. Men can buy tuxedoes, suits, sports coats, athletic nylon or leather motorcycle jackets, socks, ties or a pair of Jockey briefs the size of a spin-naker at a rock bottom price.

Between the ladies’ and men’s clothing section is the Center’s Art Department. A nearby sign reports that one unrecognised art treasure was sold for US$50, but the lucky buyer later discovered it was worth more than $10,000. That picture may not, however, have much resembled the Tijuana black felt portraits I thumbed through looking for my own personal fortune.

Before the happy but harried shop-pers line up at the cash registers, they are encouraged to visit the small alcove which forms the Center’s museum of Astounding Unclaimed Baggage. A violin made and signed by a student of Stradivarius, a 3,500 year-old Egyptian artifact, an original Jim Hensen life-sized puppet from a feature movie, all found their way to this dead-let-

ter box. The thoughtful shopper who visits this exhibit and who is not still worried about whether to take the red or the black 34C may possibly ask: “How could anyone lose something that valuable?” And then ask: “How is it possible after at least 90 days of intensive tracking by the airline that the rightful owners of these extraordi-nary items could not be found?”

The Center provokes many such thoughts. Even in the midst of the shopping frenzy, it would be the very hardened bargain hunter who was not a little saddened by some of the personal losses on display. The most obvious are in the children’s sections. A favourite doll or stuffed animal dragged lovingly around on a family

vacation had vanished into oblivion. A bedtime storybook, ritually re-read so often the exhausted mom recites it in her own sleep, is just gone.

But even if a young person or single adult misses the small sorrow of a child’s tiny loss, almost everyone who has sufficient consciousness not to buy someone else’s Jockey briefs will pause a moment in front of the lost wedding dress display. Did the bride lose it on her way to the wedding? When the baggage carousel finally stopped turning and the last piece of luggage was trolleyed off, was she standing there alone? Did the lost luggage agent tell her not to worry? Did he assure her it would be on the next plane? Did he tell her: “Worst case, honey, it’ll be here tomorrow, never you mind!”?

But it wasn’t there on the next plane. And it wasn’t there the next day. And as any visitor to The Unclaimed Baggage Center could have told her: the “worst case” can be very much worse than that.

A former employee told me that the Center once found the ash remains of someone’s

dearly departed. Presumably whoever gave grandpa to the baggage handlers

wasn’t too happy with the will.

Page 35: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 200536

FCC Member and racing driv-er Matthew Marsh is poised to fulfil a childhood ambition by

taking part in the world’s greatest sports car race, the Le Mans 24 Hours. Matthew is spearheading an ambi-tious project which will see a Hong Kong-owned, sponsored and driven car compete in the endurance classic for the first time.

“It’s all systems go – we have an agreement for the car, we have secured the bulk of the sponsorship and we are in the process of finalising the three-man driving team,” says Matthew, who is the current Porsche Infineon Car-rera Cup Asia cham-pion.

“We intend to prove that Hong Kong can compete on the world stage. It is an enormous challenge, but we have the drive, the ambition and the talent to succeed.”

Matthew’s team, Noble Group-GruppeM Racing, will be driving a Porsche GT3 RSR with a dis-tinctive yellow, white and red livery that features a large bauhinia on the roof.

The road to Le Mans will begin with four races this year in the Le Mans Endurance Series in Europe – each event is 1,000km and lasts about six hours – followed by a trip to the 12 Hours of Sebring race in Florida next March. Positive results will secure an invitation to the Le Mans 24 Hours in June 2006.

Matthew, a 14-year Hong Kong res-ident who is engaged to Singaporean model Jessie Leong, has previously taken part in 24-hour races in Germa-ny, Belgium and Australia. “Le Mans is the ultimate test for a sports car driver,” says the 36-year-old Briton. “It will be a dream come true for me

personally but, more importantly, it will be a team effort. This project will put Hong Kong motorsport in the global spotlight.”

The project is being backed by two

Hong Kong companies – Noble Group and the William E Connor Group – and the Chinese-owned GruppeM Racing team based in the UK.

FCC member and GR Asia racing team owner Tim Huxley, who helped Matthew put the project together, adds: “This is more than just a race, it’s a massive adventure which we hope all Hong Kong’s sports car enthu-siasts will get behind.

“Our priority has been to put together the most competitive and professional package possible, and we believe we have achieved that. Over the course of this year, the team will gain the experience and credibility to do the job at Le Mans next June.”

With Le Mans entries divided into four classes – LMP1 and LMP2 for pro-totypes (cars designed specifically for racing) and GT1 and GT2 for modified

road cars, Matthew and his team are aiming for GT2.

Matthew explains: “One of the fac-tors that will be important to the race organisers is that drivers are compe-tent in the category they’re in. Myself and the other drivers can clearly dem-onstrate that we’ve done a lot of driv-ing in Porsche GT3s and that we’ve done quite well in them.

“It makes perfect sense for us to go in at this level, because the key point is that this is not the last time we will be racing at Le Mans. What started off, for me, as the ultimate objective, simply to compete at Le Mans, has changed. Now the project is happen-ing, I’m thinking about a five-year programme in which we move up through the classes.

“The other key point about start-ing in GT2 is that we really can say we are going there with the intention of doing well in our class. Even in GT2 there are some world class drivers, but the cars will all be pretty equal, we are going to be fully prepared and we will have three drivers who are more than capable. Put it this way, we’ll be going there to get on the podium.”

On The Fast Track

Left: Matthew and Jessie. Top: The Porsche GT3

FCC People

Page 36: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

3737

Around the FCC

British Tailors – Peter SoInter-Continental Hotel (formerly Regent Hotel), L-088, G/F, New World Centre, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon

MOBILE: (852) 9312 5610 Tel: (852) 2721 5891 Fax: (852) 2723 2213 E-mail: [email protected] www.britishtailors.com.hk

“One of the best Hong Kong tailors”The New York Times

The Original British Tailors – Peter So

For over thirty years, British Tailors have been crafting men’s and ladies’ shirts, suits, coats and dresses. Each piece of clothing is carefully tailored to fi t your individual style and size. With one of the biggest fabric selections in Hong Kong, we attract many loyal customers and international celebrities. Come in and visit us today!

STAR FERRY

BRITISH TAILORS – PETER SO(L-088, G/F, Inter-Continental Hotel)

TSIM SHA TSUI

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005

RacingFirst

FCC members David Ferraris and Anthony Delpeche made Hong Kong

horse racing history in April when the trainer-jockey pairing won both the Hong Kong Derby and the Queen Elizabeth II Cup in a single season, a double first.

Never before has either a trainer or a jockey managed to chalk up such a victory. The fact that the pair teamed up to win the double makes the victory particularly sweet. Kudos, too, to the champion horse, Vengeance of Rain, a four-year-old bay gelding.

The line-up in the $1.8 million QE II Cup, the first leg in the international 13-race World Racing Championship, which also includes the Breeders’ Cup Classic

and Breeders’ Cup Turf, was reported as the “strongest international meeting of staying horses ever fielded.”

Vengeance of Rain’s victory came on the heels of his 23/4-length win over Russian Pearl in the Hong Kong Derby on March 13 at Sha Tin.

“He’d come along so nicely from the

Derby, I was confident before the race and even more so in the run,” said jockey and new FCC member, Anthony, after the victory.

Trainer David was also full of praise for Vengeance of Rain. “He’s a lovely horse and a late maturer. We haven’t seen the best of him yet.”

Pam and David Ferraris, Candice and Anthony Delpeche

FAMILIAR FACE: Pritam Singh tries on an FCC windbreaker during a visit to the Club made in the course of his recent return trip to Hong Kong. Settled now in happy retirement in Canada, Pritam, a former civil servant, was an FCC stalwart. He and his wife Daljit’s many friends in Hong Kong fondly remember the pair for their near-legendary hospitality, Pritam’s lively interest in music and cinema and Daljit’s culinary expertise.

BOB DAVIS

Page 37: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 200538

FREELANCE PHOTOGRAPHERS

BERTRAND VIRGILE SIMON — Editorials and corporate brochures Tel: 2526 4465 E-mail: [email protected] Website: WWW.RED-DESERT.COM.HK

RAY CRANBOURNE — Editorial, Corporate and IndustrialTel/Fax: 2525 7553 E-mail: ray_cran [email protected]

BOB DAVIS — Corporate/Advertising/EditorialTel: 9460 1718 Website: www.BOBDAVIS-photographer.com

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MARK REGAN — English tuition for speaking, writing, educational, business or life skills. Also freelance writing – people, education, places, entertainment. Tel/Fax: 2146 9841 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.markregan.com

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Professional ContactsRoyal Asiatic Society

Th e Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society welcomes new members interested in the culture and history of Hong Kong, China and Asia. We arrange monthly talks, local visits and overseas trips to places of historical interest.

An annual Journal and a bi-monthly Newsletter are published.

For information:Tel/fax 2813 7500,

email [email protected] or go to www.royalasiaticsociety.org.hk

Page 38: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005 39

Mail or fax this form to the FCC advertising team❒ Copy attached

❒ 2 lines @ $100 ❒ 3 lines @ $150 ❒ 4 lines @ $200 ❒ 5 lines @ $250

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Page 39: The Correspondent, May - June 2005

40

Ian Smith, who believes he is the only active FCC member resident in the

“other” SAR, is a busy man. He averages up to 10 days each month on the road, selling his environmentally-friendly fragrances blended from essential oils to hotels throughout the region, man-ages to patronise the FCC regularly and still finds time to tend the Protestant Cem-eteries in Macau, a job he has held for about 12 years.

“I was asked by the Bish-op’s representative if I would look after the maintenance and upkeep of two cemeter-ies and the Morrison chapel. It’s a pretty simple job. I rep-resent the UK, the Ameri-cans, the Germans and the Dutch as their representative in Macau for the Protestant cemeteries,” he says.

“Basically what I do is attend meetings twice a year and I ensure that the chapel and the cemeteries and the surrounds are kept in good order, making sure that the gardens are kept in good condition, the trees are pruned, and everything is spick and span.”

The result are havens of peace and calm which are to be increas-ingly treasured amid the cacophonous construction boom that has transformed drowsy Macau into what Ian calls “crane city”.

“The other thing we do in the cemeteries is every five years we paint all the inscriptions, so you can read them… It’s very pleasant. It’s probably the most tranquil place in Macau at present.”

By far the best known of the cem-eteries is the Old Protestant Cemetery,

next to the chapel named after Robert Morrison, who translated the Bible into Chinese. Morrison and his family are buried in the cemetery, as are a number of notables closely associated with the 19th century China coastal trade. Holding pride of place is the

tomb of painter George Chinnery who died in 1851 and whose inscription – as well as including a typo – describes how he proclaimed the Christian Mes-sage “by word and by brush”.

Other worthies include Lord John Spencer Churchill, ancestor of Sir Winston. But a large number of the graves are of much less grand folk – seamen, traders and the like – marked by simple, poi-gnant headstones. Many of them died young, from dis-ease or accidents. One reads: “John P. Griffin Seaman Born in New York and died on board the US Ship Plymouth in Macau Roads by a fall from aloft…”

“I find them all interest-ing,” says Ian. “It’s one of the beautiful places in Macau, the one people interested in history should visit at least once.”

Also under Ian’s watch-ful care is a more recently established cemetery. “We have approval for 50 burial sites, and 15 memorials, but they have not been all used because the population of Macau is (predominantly) Catholic, there are not many

Protestants.” While the Old Protestant Cem-

etery is listed in guide books, there is no attempt – or wish – to promote it as a tourist attraction. There are no tour groups. “It’s never crowded. You can go and sit there, meditate, think,

read without interruption – unless there’s some more piling nearby.”

Macau’s breakneck devel-opment as it aims to over-haul Las Vegas as the world’s largest gaming market has not yet encroached on Ian’s precious oases of tranquil-

lity. But in place where planned exotica include an artificial – but working – vol-cano and an underwater casino, one wonders if anywhere – including a cem-etery – can remain sacred.

What members get up to when away from the

Club

PHOTOGRAPH BY BOB DAVIS

Our man in MacauJonathan Sharp talks to Ian Smith

“I was asked by the Bishop’s representative if I would look after

the maintenance and upkeep of two cemeteries and the Morrison chapel.

It’s a pretty simple job.”

Out of Context

THE CORRESPONDENT MAY/JUNE 2005