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Algérie – chapitre 3

AlgérieDjanetAlgérieDjanetAlgérie Djanet Part 2.        Djanet Crew change and desert preparations | The explosive legacy of the Franco-Algerian War We are in Djanet for 48 hours, picking up 5 more crew members at the airport, shaking out the sand and preparing for the next leg of the journey into the southeast corner of the Tassili n’Ajjer park and the Tadrart Rouge, within easy bazooka range, we joke, of the borders with Libya and Niger. We will need to be self-sufficient for 12 days and begin filling tanks and jerry cans with fuel and water and loading up on fresh food. As I arrange supplies in the Defender, a young woman introduces herself. She is an English teacher in Algiers visiting her family in Djanet. After a pleasant exchange, she offers us a tin full of cookies she had just made. I give her one of my baksheesh Swiss chocolate bars. She accepts it with obvious pleasure, but her mother calls her over and whispers something in her ear. She shyly asks if I have “medicine against headaches”. I had read that this was a common request in the remote places of the Sahara and had come prepared with extra boxes of paracetamol. We say goodbye to Amastan and meet our new guide for the dunes, Otchi, also a Tuareg, with whom our group’s leader has worked before. He is stout and solid, with a toothless smile and eyes baked into a permanent squint. He is wearing dark brown pants and a dark brown coat, and unlike most Tuareg we meet, he does not cover his head, revealing a crown of soft thinning curls. Otchi grew up here and has been exploring the desert on moped since he was 14. He is passionate about the region’s rock art and has guided

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Algérie – chapitre 4

AlgérieDjanetAlgérieDjanetAlgérie Djanet Part 2.        Djanet Crew change and desert preparations | The explosive legacy of the Franco-Algerian War We are in Djanet for 48 hours, picking up 5 more crew members at the airport, shaking out the sand and preparing for the next leg of the journey into the southeast corner of the Tassili n’Ajjer park and the Tadrart Rouge, within easy bazooka range, we joke, of the borders with Libya and Niger. We will need to be self-sufficient for 12 days and begin filling tanks and jerry cans with fuel and water and loading up on fresh food. As I arrange supplies in the Defender, a young woman introduces herself. She is an English teacher in Algiers visiting her family in Djanet. After a pleasant exchange, she offers us a tin full of cookies she had just made. I give her one of my baksheesh Swiss chocolate bars. She accepts it with obvious pleasure, but her mother calls her over and whispers something in her ear. She shyly asks if I have “medicine against headaches”. I had read that this was a common request in the remote places of the Sahara and had come prepared with extra boxes of paracetamol. We say goodbye to Amastan and meet our new guide for the dunes, Otchi, also a Tuareg, with whom our group’s leader has worked before. He is stout and solid, with a toothless smile and eyes baked into a permanent squint. He is wearing dark brown pants and a dark brown coat, and unlike most Tuareg we meet, he does not cover his head, revealing a crown of soft thinning curls. Otchi grew up here and has been exploring the desert on moped since he was 14. He is passionate about the region’s rock art and has guided

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Algérie – chapitre 5

AlgérieDjanetAlgérieDjanetAlgérie Djanet Part 2.        Djanet Crew change and desert preparations | The explosive legacy of the Franco-Algerian War We are in Djanet for 48 hours, picking up 5 more crew members at the airport, shaking out the sand and preparing for the next leg of the journey into the southeast corner of the Tassili n’Ajjer park and the Tadrart Rouge, within easy bazooka range, we joke, of the borders with Libya and Niger. We will need to be self-sufficient for 12 days and begin filling tanks and jerry cans with fuel and water and loading up on fresh food. As I arrange supplies in the Defender, a young woman introduces herself. She is an English teacher in Algiers visiting her family in Djanet. After a pleasant exchange, she offers us a tin full of cookies she had just made. I give her one of my baksheesh Swiss chocolate bars. She accepts it with obvious pleasure, but her mother calls her over and whispers something in her ear. She shyly asks if I have “medicine against headaches”. I had read that this was a common request in the remote places of the Sahara and had come prepared with extra boxes of paracetamol. We say goodbye to Amastan and meet our new guide for the dunes, Otchi, also a Tuareg, with whom our group’s leader has worked before. He is stout and solid, with a toothless smile and eyes baked into a permanent squint. He is wearing dark brown pants and a dark brown coat, and unlike most Tuareg we meet, he does not cover his head, revealing a crown of soft thinning curls. Otchi grew up here and has been exploring the desert on moped since he was 14. He is passionate about the region’s rock art and has guided

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Algérie – chapitre 6

AlgérieDjanetAlgérieDjanetAlgérie Djanet Part 2.        Djanet Crew change and desert preparations | The explosive legacy of the Franco-Algerian War We are in Djanet for 48 hours, picking up 5 more crew members at the airport, shaking out the sand and preparing for the next leg of the journey into the southeast corner of the Tassili n’Ajjer park and the Tadrart Rouge, within easy bazooka range, we joke, of the borders with Libya and Niger. We will need to be self-sufficient for 12 days and begin filling tanks and jerry cans with fuel and water and loading up on fresh food. As I arrange supplies in the Defender, a young woman introduces herself. She is an English teacher in Algiers visiting her family in Djanet. After a pleasant exchange, she offers us a tin full of cookies she had just made. I give her one of my baksheesh Swiss chocolate bars. She accepts it with obvious pleasure, but her mother calls her over and whispers something in her ear. She shyly asks if I have “medicine against headaches”. I had read that this was a common request in the remote places of the Sahara and had come prepared with extra boxes of paracetamol. We say goodbye to Amastan and meet our new guide for the dunes, Otchi, also a Tuareg, with whom our group’s leader has worked before. He is stout and solid, with a toothless smile and eyes baked into a permanent squint. He is wearing dark brown pants and a dark brown coat, and unlike most Tuareg we meet, he does not cover his head, revealing a crown of soft thinning curls. Otchi grew up here and has been exploring the desert on moped since he was 14. He is passionate about the region’s rock art and has guided

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Algérie – chapitre 7

AlgérieDjanetAlgérieDjanetAlgérie Djanet Part 2.        Djanet Crew change and desert preparations | The explosive legacy of the Franco-Algerian War We are in Djanet for 48 hours, picking up 5 more crew members at the airport, shaking out the sand and preparing for the next leg of the journey into the southeast corner of the Tassili n’Ajjer park and the Tadrart Rouge, within easy bazooka range, we joke, of the borders with Libya and Niger. We will need to be self-sufficient for 12 days and begin filling tanks and jerry cans with fuel and water and loading up on fresh food. As I arrange supplies in the Defender, a young woman introduces herself. She is an English teacher in Algiers visiting her family in Djanet. After a pleasant exchange, she offers us a tin full of cookies she had just made. I give her one of my baksheesh Swiss chocolate bars. She accepts it with obvious pleasure, but her mother calls her over and whispers something in her ear. She shyly asks if I have “medicine against headaches”. I had read that this was a common request in the remote places of the Sahara and had come prepared with extra boxes of paracetamol. We say goodbye to Amastan and meet our new guide for the dunes, Otchi, also a Tuareg, with whom our group’s leader has worked before. He is stout and solid, with a toothless smile and eyes baked into a permanent squint. He is wearing dark brown pants and a dark brown coat, and unlike most Tuareg we meet, he does not cover his head, revealing a crown of soft thinning curls. Otchi grew up here and has been exploring the desert on moped since he was 14. He is passionate about the region’s rock art and has guided

Lire la suite »

Algérie – chapitre 2

AlgérieDjanetAlgérieDjanetAlgérie Djanet Part 2.        Djanet Crew change and desert preparations | The explosive legacy of the Franco-Algerian War We are in Djanet for 48 hours, picking up 5 more crew members at the airport, shaking out the sand and preparing for the next leg of the journey into the southeast corner of the Tassili n’Ajjer park and the Tadrart Rouge, within easy bazooka range, we joke, of the borders with Libya and Niger. We will need to be self-sufficient for 12 days and begin filling tanks and jerry cans with fuel and water and loading up on fresh food. As I arrange supplies in the Defender, a young woman introduces herself. She is an English teacher in Algiers visiting her family in Djanet. After a pleasant exchange, she offers us a tin full of cookies she had just made. I give her one of my baksheesh Swiss chocolate bars. She accepts it with obvious pleasure, but her mother calls her over and whispers something in her ear. She shyly asks if I have “medicine against headaches”. I had read that this was a common request in the remote places of the Sahara and had come prepared with extra boxes of paracetamol. We say goodbye to Amastan and meet our new guide for the dunes, Otchi, also a Tuareg, with whom our group’s leader has worked before. He is stout and solid, with a toothless smile and eyes baked into a permanent squint. He is wearing dark brown pants and a dark brown coat, and unlike most Tuareg we meet, he does not cover his head, revealing a crown of soft thinning curls. Otchi grew up here and has been exploring the desert on moped since he was 14. He is passionate about the region’s rock art and has guided

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Article test

Algérie Djanet Algeria is both blessed and cursed with oil and gas reserves. The 10th largest country in the world, Algeria is ranked 11th in the world for its natural gas production, making this industry the backbone of the Algerian economy. But Algeria is also surrounded by difficult neighbors with unstable governments, jihadist groups, black-market bandits, human traffickers, and thousands of kilometers of remote borders nearly impossible to patrol or secure. Amal tells us that the government is also under pressure from ‘outside forces’ to ensure that Algeria’s vast resources don’t fall into the wrong hands. Because of its oil and gas reserves, Algeria did not rush to develop its tourism sector after independence as its Maghreb neighbors Morocco and Tunisia did, and tourism is still a double-edged sword for Algeria. Many would like the income that tourism would bring while others fear the destabilizing influence that an influx of strangers with strange ideas might have on the complex and fragile stability of the country. We feel this sentiment percolate through our conversations with several Algerians we speak to, who warmly welcome us but also make it clear that we are their guests, not their clients. I pay close attention to the way the women are veiled as we enter each new town to know how much of my face I can leave uncovered. We speak a few words of Arabic and avoid launching into conversations in French, the former colonial language that only the older generation speaks fluently now. I arrived in France in 1998 when France was just beginning to come to terms with what happened during ‘the silent war’ between France and Algeria, only officially called a war in 1990. For France, Algeria was simply the southern territory of the French empire, with Charles de Gaulle declaring

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Algérie – chapitre 1

AlgérieDe la frontière Tunisie-Algérie à DjanetAlgérieDe la frontière Tunisie-Algérie à DjanetAlgérie De la frontière Tunisie-Algérie à Djanet Part 1. The Tunisian-Algerian border to Djanet The Algerian Sahara | Guides, police escorts, migrants and marvels We arrive early at the Taleb Larbi border crossing between southern Tunisia and Algeria. We are in the red zone, ‘formally advised against’ by the French ministry of foreign affairs. We know that a long day is ahead to clear police checkpoints and customs. As we join the waiting line of cars, we meet Amastan, our Tuareg guide who will help us cross into Algeria and escort us over the next 1800 km south along the red-zone border with Libya, then southwest into the yellow zones (‘not recommended except for imperative reasons’). The goal for this first leg of our journey is Djanet, our point of departure for visiting the Tassili N’Ajjer National Park and the Tadrart Rouge mountain range. Amastan, ‘protector’ in Tuareg, is tall and imposing, wearing a traditional Tuareg chéche head scarf and a long tunic over loose pants. He waves us over to a small parking lot in front of the high concrete arches that mark the border post. We hand over our passports, car registration, visa applications, and cash to be exchanged, and settle in to wait. It is sunrise and the line is already long with an improbable collection of barely-functional Mercedes used to transport cheap Algerian diesel back into Tunisia. Our convoy of 7 offroad vehicles from Switzerland and France is also an improbable collection that offers a distraction to the waiting line of cars: a Toyota Landcruiser HJ61, a Safari, a Tacoma, a Hi-Lux, a Jeep Wrangler JKU Rubicon, and 2 Land Rover Defender 110s. Our ages range from 34 to 79, and for this delivery leg of

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