Covering
Jonas
by
Fred Reed

Rally in Angolan
bush, Savimbi on backdrop. Photo: Larry Leamer
Letters pour
in, or might if some did, saying, Fred, tell us about the
time you were a terribly romantic correspondent in darkest Africa
with Jonas Savimbi and bounced around in stolen Soviet trucks and
had to drink sumo all the time. All right. Since you ask.
I had just
come aboard the Washington Times in the early eighties. The
editor was Smith Hempstone, an old Africa hand Id met on a
junket to Taipei. Smith had perhaps read too much Hemingway. On
the wall behind his desk was a gaudy tribal shield with crossed
spears. Anyway, he told me I was going to Angola to run around with
Savimbis guerrillas.
South Africa
didnt want reporters running around Angola. Larry Leamer (my
photographer) and I landed in Joburg with 200 rolls of film and
a line of twaddle about how we were bird photographers. It was all
very Terry-and-the-Pirates. We stood under a chandelier in some
hotel and gave a password to a guy who put us on a flight to Windhoek
and then we got in a high-wing Cessna with some bush pilots and
flew to the Caprivi Strip, where I suppose our birds were thought
to be, and dropped under South African radar in a blinding thunderstorm
about thirty feet above the trees. This was when we werent
ten feet above the trees because of sudden downdrafts. Finally we
found an abandoned airstrip and landed and all these very black
guys came out of the bushes with AKs. I remember thinking, These
had better be the right very black guys with AKs or this isnt
good at all.
Cuando Cubango
in southeastern Angola has trees about every thirty feet, so from
the air you cant see anything but you can drive the stolen
Soviet trucks. See, the Cubans were helping the MPLA, which was
the communist government in Luanda, and South Africa was helping
Savimbis group, which was UNITA, and lying about it, and something
called SWAPO was active in the south, and the FNLA in the north,
and somehow the trucks got to Cuando Cubango and Savimbi ambushed
them. (This is how scrofulous wars always are, mostly Alphabits.)
Anyway we went
driving through sand with these heavily armed guys who gave us sumo,
which is Portuguese for godawful sticky red coolade-like gunch.
I came to hate it like poison, which it closely resembled. From
time to time we ran into herds of really African-looking animals
with funny horns but not much dynamism and had to wait for them
to decide to go somewhere else. But it was sunny and peaceful. We
felt very manful and adventurous. I mean, why be a reporter if you
cant strike poses?
We got to Jamba,
which was Savimbis bush headquarters, a large collection of
stick huts, which can actually be architecturally elaborate with
lintels and things. Blue skies, no clouds, drill-instructor looking
guys giving classes in maintaining various machine guns. They had
wickerwork things that were supposed to stop napalm if Luandas
MiG found us. I rather hoped it didnt. Lunch was boiled potatoes
in a canteen cup with a fried egg on top, and sumo, like really
nasty cherry molasses. We both got assigned bearers who carried
our camera bags. (I was shooting for Soldier of Fortune under
the name of Rick Venable to make an extra buck.) All we needed was
for Tarzan to come yodeling out of the trees.
We talked to
Savimbi at length about his democratic tendencies, which he didnt
have any of, but he had graduated from the University of Lausanne
and fielded questions agilely in French, Portuguese, English, and
Ovumbundu, I believe it was. A very smart guy but I remember thinking
that I did not want to be his prisoner. Then we had the boiled potatoes
and the fried egg and the sumo. I was reaching my limits.
One day at
lunch I finally snapped and came out of my hut, shrieking, Larry!
I think Im anti-Sumotic!
Huh?
Why?
Because
I cant stand the juice!
He looked at
me strangely. The sun is hot in Angola. Maybe he thought Id
forgotten to wear my hat.
We spent a
couple of days driving to villages, which made primitive
seem like one of those Star Warts movies. Savimbi had the villagers
trained. They came out in a mob and sang, Wadawhudda-sah-VEEM-bi!
Wadawhudda-sah-VEEM-bi! and danced hiphop, which didnt
exist yet in America but I know what I saw. Once the chief of a
village decided to give me a chicken, a vicious beast with death
in her eye and a dangerous-looking beak. In a moment of genius I
smiled thanks and indicated with a glance that Larry was my hen-bearer,
so the chief handed the creature to him. She showed up that night
on top of the boiled potatoes.
Savimbis
people had managed to shoot down a Russian Antonov and capture the
pilots. Im not sure just how that happened. Anyway the fragments
were on display in a sort of museum made of hut material and the
Red Cross was going to fly in and carry off the pilots, who were
in good condition. This was to show Savimibis good will, which
he didnt have any of. By this time I was ready to get the
hell out, being persuaded that if I even saw another cup of sumo
I would develop diabetes on the spot.
We
all drove back to the barely existent landing strip to await the
Red Cross, who arrived in an ancient DC-3 with a ratpack of reporters.
I knew a great moment for posing when I saw one. The Red Cross officials
disembarked. Nurses followed to look after the Russians, who didnt
need it. Then came the journalists, who seemed to be general-coverage
people agog at being in such an exotic and perilous place. They
were our prey. Heh heh.
We swaggered
out of the bush with the slight cockiness that marks men who have
been months in combat in places not even on the maps, men for whom
life with guerrilla bands is everyday experience. Yes, we implied,
things have been a bit rough, screaming hordes of drugged-up communists
coming through the wire almost nightly though, to be honest,
we havent been shelled for days. Well, not much anyway. Couple
of sappers came into my hut last night. Took them out with my knife,
you know. The usual. I am a conscienceless fraud.
Off
we took and out we went, toward Joburg, very low over the trees
to keep SAM-7s from getting a lock, in a plane that first flew I
think in 1936. I was happy. I knew for a fact that there was no
sumo in South Africa.
In
the Sumo Hilton. Photo: Larry Leamer
March
30, 2006
Fred
Reed is author of Nekkid
in Austin: Drop Your Inner Child Down a Well.
Copyright
© 2006 Fred Reed
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