Sam Kiley 

Starvation and excess

Sam Kiley on the Third-World Diet.
  
  


The yard of sausage and wheel of cheese I'd taken to Rwanda to cover the genocide were long gone. Tutsi guerrilla fighters would not let me catch so much as a feral chicken in a countryside swarming with the livestock of their murdered fellow tribesmen. After three weeks I was literally starving. Two cups of tea made with water so flavoured with corpses we called it Eau de Cadavre and a bowl of rice tasting of paraffin was all I got from the soldiers. The lesson here is that you eat what soldiers eat. In Liberia that can mean one's fellow man. So, be prepared: Tabasco sauce and Pot Noodles are essentials. The alternative is rice soaked in sheep fat in Afghanistan; python with slimy wet skin in the Congo; goat's liver in a bun in Somalia.

But it's not all bad. In the Middle East a destitute Arab family might feed us their last meal, and we'll get fat on cinnamon-scented masgouf fish, raisined rice, and lamb boiled in milk. Weight piled on in Iraq and Palestine will quickly fall off with a dose of runny tummy in Freetown, Kinshasa or Kashmir.

Sex or food?

I would curl up and die without both.

· Sam Kiley is a veteran correspondent, reporting from the Middle East and Africa for Channel 4's 'Dispatches'

 

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