Thursday 3 January 2019

IRISH DOCTOR ON A DISTANT ISLAND

 

By Paul Cullen, The Irish Times, 8th October 2016{4}
Kevin O’Brien with his wife and daughter Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Kevin O’Brien with his wife Aoife McGough and their daughter Síomha at home in St Helena. About 4,000km east of Brazil and 2,000km west of Africa, St Helena is about as remote as remote gets.{c}
As one of St Helena’s two GPs, Kevin O’Brien continues a tradition of Irish doctors there
To take up his new job, Kevin O’Brien first took a flight from Dublin Airport to Heathrow, then travelled to the RAF base at Brize Norton, where he joined members of the British Antarctic Expedition on a long-haul flight to Ascension Island, a tiny rockfall in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.
O’Brien’s travels were far from over; from Ascension, he boarded the last working Royal Mail ship in the world, which steamed for three days before arriving at his ultimate destination, St Helena.
About 4,000km east of Brazil and 2,000km west of Africa, St Helena is about as remote as remote gets. The island, no bigger than Achill and just as mountainous, has been home for the past year to O’Brien, his wife Aoife McGough and their daughter Síomha.
The plan was always to move away, O’Brien explains down a surprisingly clear WhatsApp connection, given that his five-digit home number on the island was on the blink. We figured this was a good time in our lives to travel, when we weren’t tied down.
The couple arrived last February, three months after O’Brien answered an online advertisement. Like many others in my GP class, I was reluctant to commit to general practice in Ireland in the current state of change. And then countries all over the world are crying out for Irish doctors.
But while the medical brain drain has led most Irish doctors to sophisticated health systems in Australia, Canada or the UK, O’Brien finds himself in a British Overseas Territory with a population of 4,500 and a stripped-back medical service to match.
It’s very British but also has a tropical island feel, he says. Everyone stops to talk when they pass. You salute every car, and say hi to everyone.
We were worried at first about it being claustrophobic, about not being able to get off the island for a day. But it’s an amazingly beautiful and varied place, and the people have been so welcoming. We felt at home very fast.
The locals are descendants of English settlers, Chinese labourers, Boer prisoners and African slaves; names such as O’Bey and O’Dean hints at an Irish lineage too. The Union Jack is the official flag and English the lingua franca, though spoken with a unique dialect. Place names such as Half Tree Hollow, The Gates of Chaos and Alarm Forest could have been plucked from Tolkien, and the laid-back pace of life and tropical fruit trees give an almost Caribbean feel.
Island life has its own nuances, as O’Brien refers to them. The shops close at 5pm and that’s it for picking up supplies. Fresh fruit arrives on the boat every three weeks, and the best produce sells out fast. When his mobile phone broke recently, it was sent for repair in South Africa and came back two months later.
As one of St Helena’s two GPs, O’Brien is continuing a long tradition of Irish medical presence on the island. Its most famous resident, Napoleon, was attended to during his enforced exile by an Irish doctor, Barry O’Meara.
Then, there was the curious case of Dr James Barry, another Cork medic who performed one of the first caesarean sections in 1826 and lived on St Helena for two years. After his death, it was discovered that Barry was, in fact, a woman.
O’Brien’s life is more prosaic. Clinics are based in the island’s 31-bed hospital, which boasts an operating theatre and other basic facilities. Scans have to be reported remotely from South Africa, while specialist services are provided by visiting doctors. Serious cases have to be sent to Cape Town, where patients can spend months away from home.
In June, O’Brien found himself as the leading doctor in the first ever evacuation from St Helena, involving a sick premature baby who was flown to hospital in Cape Town.
Just as in Ireland, he spends a lot of time dealing with chronic diseases such as obesity and diabetes. But unlike at home, he can access tests directly. In Galway, I used to have to send patients to a hospital appointment in order for an ultrasound to be booked. You also realise how much more careful we could be in Ireland with our drug spending when you work somewhere that is more prudent with its drug choices and budget.
When he signed up for the posting, St Helena was on the cusp of great change, with the planned opening of a €300 million airport in the spring. However, the opening of the airport, which was built with a view to opening up the island to tourism, has been postponed indefinitely because of safety concerns over the wind shear. The project, already dubbed Britain’s biggest overseas aid fiasco, risks becoming a white elephant.
So for another while yet, St Helena remains marooned and apart. A round trip visit for two people costs a prohibitive €8,000 from Europe, making it unlikely that the parents of O’Brien and his wife will get to make that hoped-for visit to see their only grandchild.
The other worry we always have is the amount of time it would take to get home in an emergency if needed - a minimum of one week and possibly up to three, depending on where the RMS St Helena is in its schedule.
Our Comment: We included this article not because it contained any radical new insights into our island, but simply because it was the first thing we’ve seen in ages that was not a political jibe at the UK government using our airport as an excuse.

THE £250M ISLAND AIRPORT WHERE JETS CAN’T LAND BECAUSE IT IS TOO WINDY (AND GUESS WHAT, YOUR AID MONEY IS PAYING FOR IT)

THE £250M ISLAND AIRPORT WHERE JETS CAN’T LAND BECAUSE IT IS TOO WINDY (AND GUESS WHAT, YOUR AID MONEY IS PAYING FOR IT) 

By Vanessa Allen, Daily Mail, 3rd June 2016{4}
  • Jets can’t land at airport built with £250m foreign aid because it’s too windy
  • Royal opening at airport on the island of St Helena postponed indefinitely
  • Landing strip built with UK Department for International Development cash
  • Aim was to boost Britain’s most remote overseas territory in South Atlantic
An airport built with £250million from the ballooning foreign aid budget risks becoming a white elephant because it is too windy to land there safely, it was claimed yesterday.
A royal opening at the airport on the remote island of St Helena has been postponed indefinitely after test flights raised safety concerns.
The cliff-top landing strip was built with £250million from the Department for International Development to help boost the tiny island in the South Atlantic, which is Britain’s most remote overseas territory.
An airport built with £250million from the ballooning foreign aid budget risks becoming a white elephant because it is too windy to land there safely it was claimed yesterday. It is on the island of St Helena (pictured) Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
An airport built with £250million from the ballooning foreign aid budget risks becoming a white elephant because it is too windy to land there safely, it was claimed yesterday. It is on the island of St Helena (pictured)
Remote St Helena in the South Atlantic (pictured) has to be supplied by sea. It is home to around 4000 people Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Remote: St Helena in the South Atlantic (pictured) has to be supplied by sea. It is home to around 4,000 people
It is home to around 4,000 people. It was due to be opened by Prince Edward last month but the start of commercial flights has been delayed after trials with a Boeing 737-800 revealed a problem with turbulence and windshear on the runway approach.
Windshear is a sudden powerful change in wind direction which can destabilise or even flip large aircraft and has been responsible for crashes around the world. Former Tory party treasurer Lord Ashcroft said he was recently forced to abandon a planned visit to the island because of ‘serious concerns that the airport is too dangerous to use’.
Writing on the Conservative Home website, he said: ‘Although aviation experts are working hard to try to find a solution to the windshear problems, there is a real danger that the airport could become a hugely expensive white elephant and a terrible embarrassment to the British Government.’
The airport had been touted as a lifeline for residents and businesses on St Helena, which is about a third of the size of the Isle of Wight and lies in the South Atlantic, some 1,200 miles west from the African mainland and 1,800 miles east from Brazil.
It can currently only be reached by sea, and the ageing Royal Mail ship St Helena is to be retired, leaving the islanders cut off. It was hoped the airport, with a weekly service from Johannesburg and a monthly flight from the UK, would boost tourism and prevent job losses and population decline.
But video of the first test flight by Comair, a British Airways subsidiary in South Africa, shows the 737 lurching from side to side and it was forced to abort its first attempt at landing.
The airport was to be opened by Prince Edward last month but the start of commercial flights has been delayed after trials with a Boeing 737-800 revealed a problem with turbulence and windshear on the runway approach Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
The airport was to be opened by Prince Edward last month but the start of commercial flights has been delayed after trials with a Boeing 737-800 revealed a problem with turbulence and windshear on the runway approach
Lord Ashcroft said the pilot of his private jet, Larry Erd, had flown in war zones in Iraq and Afghanistan but had warned against trying to fly to St Helena.
The pilot said windshear was one of the biggest causes of fatal air accidents and told Lord Ashcroft: ‘St Helena clearly has a serious problem with windshear.’ A test pilot who had made the landing was said to have described it as ‘hair-raising’.
Plans for the airport were approved by the Labour government but put on hold by Gordon Brown in 2008 after the financial crisis. The Tory-led coalition approved the scheme soon after it came to power and it was funded with £250million from DFID, the largest single investment it has made in any of Britain’s overseas territories.
Officials had hoped encouraging tourism to the island would make it less dependent on aid. It currently receives more than £25million a year under Britain’s obligations to its overseas territories. Work on the airport began in 2012.
Lord Ashcroft said delays to the project had left many of the island’s businesses struggling, and had affected the delivery of food and other vital supplies.
He said one resident, Hazel Wilmot, 60, had invested more than £2million into buying and renovating an 18th century hotel which now lay empty.
The St Helena government said it was taking ‘specific steps’ to combat the problems with turbulence and wind shear. It added ‘Every effort is being made to start airport operations at the earliest opportunity’ Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
The St Helena government said it was taking ‘specific steps’ to combat the problems with turbulence and wind shear. It added: ‘Every effort is being made to start airport operations at the earliest opportunity’
Former British Airways pilot Brian Heywood said he had warned David Cameron and the then International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell about the windshear problem, and said trying to run scheduled flights would be an ‘operational shambles’.
In a letter to a local newspaper, he said: ‘If an airport is built on the edge of a near-vertical 1,000ft cliff, the prevailing wind is bound to cause problems.’
He added: ‘To grumble about windshear at St Helena airport is a bit like grumbling about the heat in a newly built Sahara airfield in the summer. It is entirely predictable.’
The St Helena government said it was taking ‘specific steps’ to combat the problems with turbulence and wind shear. It added: ‘Every effort is being made to start airport operations at the earliest opportunity. However, safety is paramount and we will not commence commercial operations until we are satisfied with every aspect of airport operations.’
Since 2004, Britain’s foreign aid budget has rocketed by 144 per cent to £13.2billion to meet the Government target of 0.7 per cent of GDP. This means that, proportionally, it spends almost twice as much of its national wealth on aid as any other G7 nation.

THE VET, THE TORTOISE AND THE AIRPORT

 

By Joe Hollins, published on BBC Online, 21st May 2016{4}
Joe Hollins with Jonathan Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Six years ago Joe Hollins became the first permanent vet on the island of St Helena, in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Here he looked after the oldest known land animal in the world, a 184-year-old giant tortoise - while at the same time seeing the island enter the modern world with the construction of its first airport.
St Helena is famously the island where Napoleon was exiled after the battle of Waterloo. I imagine he felt little joy on his arrival here, a tiny scrap of volcanic rock thousands of miles from Paris, but for me it was quite the opposite - I chose to come here, signing up for a five-year stint as Senior Veterinary Officer. And although I didn’t know it when I took the job, I would also be witness to the biggest change in St Helena’s history since the abolition of slavery.
The island of St Helena - a mere 67 sq miles of rock right out in the middle of the Atlantic, 1,300 miles from Angola and 2,000 miles from Brazil is now on the brink of joining the rest of the world.
After investment of £250m and five years of frenetic construction, it has an airport - a masterpiece of engineering perched on the cliffs, with a runway that ends in a sheer 300m drop. It’s not open yet, but it will be soon, and then St Helena, which is sometimes described as the second most remote inhabited island in the world, will feel a lot less remote than it does now.
Airport from Diana’s Peak Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
My favourite job, as the first resident vet, has been looking after Jonathan the giant Seychelles tortoise - a 200Kg crusty old reptile that I’m very fond of. There’s no older living land animal on record in the world. We know he arrived in 1882, fully mature, which means he was about 50 then, which would make him about 184 today. He could be even older.
When I first met him he was in quite a poorly state. He was very thin - feeding was a challenge because his beak was blunt and crumbly so he couldn’t cut the grass. He has cataracts and he’s lost his sense of smell so he couldn’t see where the good grass was.
I decided to supplement his diet, so every Sunday I would go down to the paddock in front of the governor’s house, where he lives, to feed him fresh fruit and vegetables - bananas, apples, cucumber, lettuce and cabbage. He has a very fleshy, almost mammalian, tongue and a long reptilian neck, very much like a snake - and he is a prolific belcher.
After a year not only was he putting on weight and being more active, but his beak became razor sharp and I had to wear welder’s gloves to protect my fingers. His libido came back as well, and he’d try to knock David, the perpetually randy younger male, off Emma, one of the three females. Not to any great effect, but it’s a very good sign.
The life expectancy of these tortoises is approximately 150 years of age so Jonathan’s already exceeded that by quite a long way. The ancient reptile has seen off many governors, but whatever he has witnessed in his 134 years on the island, not much has changed around him until now. The pace of change on the island over the past five years has been phenomenal.
Joe Hollins feeding Jonathan Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Oldest and rarest tortoises:
  • Ships used to stack giant tortoises on board where they would stay alive and provide the crew with fresh food - thus most became extinct
  • There are two families of giant tortoises left in the world: the Pacific family (Galapagos Islands) and the Indian Ocean tortoises (Aldabra Atoll)
  • There are hundreds of thousands of Aldabran giant tortoises but only a few thousand Galapagos tortoises
  • Recently it was discovered that Jonathan is an extremely rare Seychelles giant tortoise of which there are only a few dozen left in the world
In order to prepare for the airport St Helena had to be readied for the modern world in every respect.
The UK government’s investment - equivalent to £60,000 per capita - came with conditions covering everything from taxation to social and medical services, and land ownership. There were big changes in all these areas. Six months ago they even introduced mobile phones, something that had not been possible before because of the challenging terrain of hills and deep gorges. Now everybody walks along talking on their phones, as they do in the rest of the world.
I saw the very first plane land on the island on 15th September 2015 - a historic occasion. As luck would have it I had been called out to see a sick pig on the windward side of the island where the airport is. Quite a few people had gathered to watch as a small light aircraft zoomed across the airport construction site to have a look. Its first attempt at landing was aborted and it climbed steeply away again, above the 300m cliffs at each end of the runway and the massive outcrops of rock beyond them.
To build the runway a gorge called Dry Gut had to be filled with 450000 truckloads of rock Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
To build the runway a gorge called Dry Gut had to be filled with 450,000 truckloads of rock
On the third attempt it landed and you could hear people cheering everywhere. It was not something the Saints had seen before. There were emotional scenes.
The airport was due to open on 21st May but there are still issues to sort out. Work is still under way to deal with turbulence and wind shear. Landing can be pretty hairy.
Until now the only way on and off the island has been on the last remaining true Royal Mail Ship, the RMS St Helena. She leaves Cape Town every three weeks and takes five or six nights to reach St Helena. When she anchors in the bay passengers have to take a launch to the steps, and clamber ashore with the aid of a rope.
Boatman at the landing steps Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
One of the concerns around the airport is biosecurity. The ship has always acted like a quarantine station - because the journey took so long, if anyone was incubating disease there was a chance they would fall ill on board. But by aeroplane, people can get here within hours. All we need is for somebody to arrive with a new disease and the cat’s out of the bag.
We recently had two workers on the island with malaria. Luckily we do not have the malaria-carrying mosquito, so it could not be passed on. But we do have two other pathogenic species of mosquito, Culex and Aedes, which can carry human diseases like the Zika virus, Chikungunya or Dengue fever. So the disease carriers are here but the diseases aren’t - and we mustn’t introduce them.
The RMS St Helena Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
I left, as I arrived, on the RMS St Helena. She’s quite a ship. Only 100m long, with cargo at the front and passengers at the back, she’s been the only means on and off the island forever, but she will be decommissioned as soon as the airport opens for business.
She’s a lifeline. But while she brings families together, she also tears them apart.
There are a lot of tears shed on the wharf every time she departs.
Joe Hollins at work Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Our Comment: Some video content has been omitted from the above. To see the full article go to www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-36302278.

UNDER STARTERS ORDERS…

 

By www.airnewsx.com, 3rd April 2016{4}
If you asked most people about starting up an airline in 2016, in fact since 2008…the chances are they’d laugh you out of the door. They would tell you, you’re up against the ‘big boys’ of low cost or the ‘gentlemen’ of well established. There’s one thing I root for, the plucky Brit. The one who says ‘No, this can work…an I’ll tell you why it can work’. Its the kind of attitude you need in today’s world. Even more so when the airport you’re flying to is St Helena.
I’m now waiting for the steady few of you that are now asking - ‘Where?’ Quick geography lesson for you… St Helena is an island in the Atlantic just off the west coast of Africa. It is a British Overseas Dependent Territory and until May this year, the only way of getting to this small volcanic island was by boat. St Helena Airport is due to open doors in May and for one such airline, this will be its inaugural route.
Atlantic Star Airlines Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Atlantic Star Airlines, a relative baby in aviation terms, is headed up by current British Airways Captains Richard Brown and Andrew Radford. Both have extensive operational experience on the 777/787/767 with Richard currently a training Captain on the 777/787 and Andrew, 20 years experience flying with our nations flag carrier. Further expertise comes in the form of Aiden Walsh the current ‘La Compagnie’ country director and Shonagh Woods a 20 year veteran of marketing enterprise products. The company is also supplemented by four experienced pilots all of whom have worked for British Airways directly or through its French subsidiary ‘Openskies’.
UIFly (Netherlands) Boeing 737 Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Having secured all necessary regulatory approval, the company aims to launch her first flight on Sunday 22nd May. Operating from Luton and making a technical stop to re-fuel in Banjul (Gambia) before onwards to St Helena, the flight time is marketed at 12hrs each way. Atlantic Star are working with TUIFly (Netherlands) leasing a Boeing 737-800 for the service.
So daily flights to St Helena…no not exactly. There are a large number of factors at play here. Supply and demand being the name of the game here. ASA is a dipping-of-the-toe-in-the-water-of-lets-see-what-happens. And rightly so. The business idea is sound, test the market to see what kind of demand there is for a permanently established number of flights to the island.
There’s a nichè here and that’s something I quite like, a difference. I hearken back to the beginning of this post where I said ‘Airline startups are generally doomed to failure.’ And yes they usually are, because they follow the same formulaic pattern on the same formulaic routes and go against well established low cost or full service airlines. Here this isn’t the case. There’s a logic at play, a well established and long thought out plan. There is also a beautiful uniqueness to this venture, one that in a couple of years I hope I get to experience.
Smooth winds and plane sailing ASA, a venture I surely will keep an eye on!
See alsoFly here

SAINT HELENA’S HISTORIC ISOLATION CONTINUES AS AIRPORT OPENING DELAYED

 

By Luke Barber & Simon Calder, The [UK] Independent, 13th February 2016{4}
One of the Government’s most expensive ventures, St Helena’s airport is delayed… again
[Artist’s Impression] A plane waits at the new airport in St Helena Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
[Artist’s Impression] A plane waits at the new airport in St Helena
The island of Saint Helena in the middle of the south Atlantic is one of the remotest places on the planet. It gained its main claim to fame - as home to the exiled Napoleon Bonaparte - for that very reason.
Jamestown capital of St Helena an island in the mid-Atlantic Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Jamestown, capital of St Helena, an island in the mid-Atlantic
But the historic isolation of the 4,000 inhabitants, or Saints, who live on this tiny British territory of just 122Km² was supposed finally to come to an end this year - with the opening of a new £250m airport after a decade-long wait.
Due to start operating this month, the first flights have already been put off until at least May. And frustration on the island is growing, with tickets not yet on sale and talk of hurdles still to be overcome.
Announced in 2005, the final decision on the airport was repeatedly delayed until it was agreed by the Coalition in July 2010, with construction work getting under way in November 2011.
It is one of the Government’s most expensive investments, on a per capita basis, at a cost of more than £60,000 for each person.
The island, more than 1,200 miles from the nearest land mass, is currently only accessible by a Royal Mail ship, which sets sail on a five-day journey from Cape Town once every three weeks.
Map Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
In an open letter to islanders, Richard Brown, principal of the British airline Atlantic Star - which is competing with the South African firm Comair to be the first to touch down on the island - tried to sound hopeful, although he admitted there had been some delays.
We are in contact with the air access team at St Helena Government and are confident that all the hurdles to certification will be overcome, he wrote.
However, he added that it would be premature to give a date for the airport to be certified for flights, given the complexity of the process and the work still to be done on the airport.
Therefore we are not yet able to announce the date that ticket sales will start, Mr Brown said, adding: We fully appreciate how frustrating this waiting period is for those of you who wish to finalise 2016 travel plans. We share that frustration and naturally we would love [tickets] to be on sale right now.
A pilot on the PPRuNe (Professional Pilots Rumour Network) aviation forum said: Over a month has now passed since the second round of calibration flights. Still no word if the problems with the navigational aids have been corrected and operations would be safe.
Janet Lawrence, Saint Helena airport’s project director, said the construction of the airport had hit a snag because of the lie of the land. Due to the unknown nature of building an airport on the island’s uneven terrain, changes in design had to be made to facilitate that, she said.
St Helena has been under British possession since the East India Company was given permission to govern by Oliver Cromwell in 1657. After his defeat at Waterloo in 1815, Napoleon, who had escaped from the island of Elba in the Mediterranean, was sent to St Helena to ensure he would never again return to Europe.

LAST BOAT TO ST HELENA

 

By Matthew Engel, Financial Times, 29th January 2016{4}
One of the remotest islands on earth is getting an airport - and that could change everything
Bamboo Hedge Sandy Bay Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Bamboo Hedge, Sandy Bay
The oldest and most famous resident of St Helena is called Jonathan. His home is in the grounds of Plantation House, the 35-room Georgian mansion long occupied by the island’s governors.
He moves sluggishly; he has little idea what’s going on; he has been much put upon yet remains placid; his welfare has long been a concern. Jonathan has witnessed the comings and goings of 26 governors sent out by London to take charge of his own and St Helena’s welfare, and treated them all with what looks like good-natured contempt. In all of this, Jonathan might be not just a tourist attraction but the island’s motif.
Well, perhaps not in the matter of size. This is a minuscule island and Jonathan is a Seychelles giant tortoise. He may be the world’s oldest creature: no one knows exactly how old he was in 1882 when he first arrived. The scientists think he was at least 50; his life might even have overlapped with that of St Helena’s most famous former resident, one Napoleon Bonaparte, who died in 1821 having spent the last six years of his life confined here, an experience he endured less phlegmatically than Jonathan.
St Helena was chosen to house the former emperor after his defeat at Waterloo because it was (a) a British possession and (b) a byword for remoteness. Both these facts are still true. Indeed, if anything the island has become more isolated. In the days of sail, up to three ships a day called at St Helena. The vessels would be serviced and victualled, taking on fresh water and fruit and vegetables to stave off scurvy: everything grew in this benign climate, just inside the tropics but cooled by the constant southern trade winds. An earthly paradise, said the first Briton to arrive, Captain Thomas Cavendish, in 1588{8}.
The occasional cruise ship and adventurous yachtie still stop by. But in general the only way on and off the island for everyone and everything is by a single ship, the RMS St Helena, which normally calls every 18 days. But not for much longer.
On the far side of the island from the capital, Jamestown (i.e. about 20 minutes’ drive away), St Helena’s international airport is nearing completion, 70 years after the idea was first mooted, 14 years after the islanders said ‘yes’ in a referendum and six years after the British government finally agreed. Now it is happening, some Saint Helenians are enduring a fit of buyers’ remorse. The government insists it will be transformational. What is certain is that a unique, magical, beautiful, troubled place is about to change forever.
Location map Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
St Helena, a microdot of volcanic leftovers in the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean, is not quite the most remote island on earth: that honour belongs to another of Britain’s South Atlantic islets, Tristan da Cunha. But Tristan only has about 300 people. St Helena has some 4,500, enough to support the world’s most isolated hospital, police station, prison, distillery, cathedral and cricket ground.
The islanders are known as Saints, and they do have some saintly qualities. This could be the friendliest place on earth - passers-by say hello, motorists wave - and the most trusting. It is an isle of unlocked doors and of car keys left in the ignition. The lack of petty crime is partly due to the Saints’ nature. Also, as Napoleon realised, escape is almost impossible.
The journey here from Cape Town currently takes five days on what everyone calls the RMS, which then makes a side trip to St Helena’s nearest neighbour, a mere 800 miles away: the British-owned, US Air Force-dominated island of Ascension. (London-bound travellers can, with luck, get there in three or four days via Ascension rather than six via Cape Town.) RMS stands for Royal Mail Ship, a designation that has otherwise all but disappeared, and is increasingly irrelevant. When I started in 1980 there would be 180 sacks of mail, recalls the ship’s captain, Rodney Young, a burly Saint who worked his way up from swabbing the decks. Now there are two or three.
But the RMS still carries all the island’s needs from the outside world somewhere in its hold, from cars to fresh veg to urgent medicine. The islanders order stuff online like the rest of us; the difference is that here express delivery means waiting about two months. The ship’s progress is always a major item on Saint FM’s morning news, sometimes the major item, unless an islander has died - that always takes precedence.
World’s oldest creature. His life may even have overlapped with that of Napoleon who spent the last six years of his life confined here an experience he endured less phlegmatically Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
World’s oldest creature. His life may even have overlapped with that of Napoleon{1}, who spent the last six years of his life confined here, an experience he endured less phlegmatically
The RMS is intimate - just 7,000 tonnes, a quarter of the size of a cross-Channel ferry, as midget as St Helena itself when seen next to a modern cruise ship. The journey is old-fashioned, sociable. The food is terrific, something rarely said about the island itself. Officers and crew, mostly Saints, either grew up with their passengers or get to know them soon enough. The ship is part of the island, says one expat. When Saints board it, they are already home. It has the same effect on a newcomer: walking up Main Street in Jamestown, after disembarking, I already feel a sense of belonging.
But the voyage is not a cruise, it is a journey. And the journeys are often linked with sadness: people heading to work overseas because there is nothing for them on the island; exiles coming back to visit sick parents and often failing to make it in time; or residents travelling to Cape Town for urgent operations that St Helena cannot perform, and sometimes failing to make those too - death at sea is not exactly normal but not that rare either. A UK-based Saint or a St Helena-based expat has to take four weeks’ holiday to get two weeks at home.
These are the last drops of an era, says Michel Dancoisne-Martineau, France’s honorary consul on the island, wearily making his (approx) 120th voyage. It is not rational for the ship to exist. Dancoisne-Martineau is the doyen of St Helena’s diplomatic corps (the only member, actually) and the guardian of its Napoleonic heritage. He has been making four journeys a year on the RMS for the past 30 years so, not surprisingly, the joys of deck quoits and shuffleboard have faded. He is not alone. I’m absolutely sick of it all, says one worldly young Saint. I can’t wait for the airport. Sad though it is to imagine this dear old ship in a breakers’ yard, it seems like a no-brainer. There are, however, other considerations
When the Portuguese first discovered the island on May 21 1502, and named it after the saint of the day, there was no one there. They kept it secret for nearly a century but when the British finally found the place, they became very interested indeed and had the maritime power and tenacity to see off rival claims. In particular, the East India Company saw it as the perfect way station for trading ships sailing home from the Orient. It was granted a charter by London to run the place and, in 1659, installed its own governor.
Napoleon on St Helena c.1820 Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Napoleon on St Helena, c.1820
Gradually, over the centuries, a people emerged, an extraordinary race with what seem like almost random characteristics, as a variety of humanity turned up and bred: slaves and slave owners; soldiers and sailors; Madagascans and Malays; Indians and Chinese. It would be impossible to pick out a Saint away from home because they really do come in all shades, shapes and sizes. Even the accent has a protean quality, as so many of them spend decades working abroad before coming home to retire.
Emigration came with the territory because St Helena has never been able to pay its way. It was a necessary cost centre for the East India Company, and intended as such. The British government, which took over direct responsibility in 1834, has always been less relaxed on this subject. The island is said to have made a profit only once in its history, in 1951, when the flax industry was at its peak. Flax is the nearest St Helena has ever come to finding a reliable living. Though there has never been a shortage of ideas - whaling, tuna, mackerel-canning, silkworms, lilies, quinine, aloe vera, cochineal, lace-making, wine - they all failed.
Now, the theory goes, tourism will come to the rescue. Not the annual thousand-odd visitors a year who until now have come to enjoy the languid 1951-style charms of both the island and the RMS, but up to 30,000 (according to one often-quoted wild surmise) or at least 4,000 (a more realistic St Helena government guesstimate). The British taxpayer has invested at least £250m in the airport since 2010 and Whitehall wants results.
The island has an annual budget of around £30m, of which nearly £20m is subsidy from the Department for International Development in London, including up to £4m to cover the RMS’s losses. It is one of 14 British Overseas Territories, too small and/or complicated to become independent, including such entities as the Cayman Islands and the Turks and Caicos, which make profits in ways British civil servants might prefer not to know about. Only three require annual grants from the Bank of Mother England: Montserrat, which was devastated by a volcanic eruption in 1995, Pitcairn (population 56), riven by accusations of paedophilia, and St Helena.
The whole purpose of the airport is to set us on the way to prosperity, so we can wash our faces, says Roy Burke, the island’s British chief secretary. St Helena has been drip-fed for so long. We were in profit in the flax era but not since. There has been limited entrepreneurial ambition for a long time.
The RMS at anchor in Jamestown Bay off the Half Tree Hollow suburb and controversial site for the planned new prison Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
The RMS at anchor in Jamestown Bay, off the Half Tree Hollow suburb and controversial site for the planned new prison
For the St Helena government, the airport has become an article of faith, a new religion, a god that must not fail: London’s wrath would be too terrible. It has been a grand project for a petite island: eight million metres³ of rock have been shifted to turn a lonely hillside into a plateau in an area called Prosperous Bay, which must have felt like a good omen. The terminal building looks remarkably high-spec. All this for what, at least in the initial stages, is likely to be a service of one weekly flight to and from Johannesburg (a 737-800 that, because of the short runway, will only be allowed to carry 120 passengers rather than the full payload of 162) and an occasional service from London.
Arguments that better value would have been achieved by an updated RMS, fast enough to cut the journey by a third, or a new breakwater in the port are no longer heard. In some ways, however, the airport is likely to make life worse for the Saints: the freighter that will replace the RMS as the source of bulk supplies is expected to arrive every five or six weeks instead of every 18 days; there is some confusion about the Ascension service. Whispered doubts persist: the crosswinds will make for unhappy landings; the Barn, the overhanging rock that dominates the approach path, will be a nightmare for pilots; as will the mist and fog for which St Helena’s highlands are infamous.
This last seems the most convincing. As the RMS approached the island, I was standing by the portside rail next to a well-informed local. Where’s the airport? I asked. Up there. So where’s the Barn? You can’t see it because of the mist. Could you land in this? You wouldn’t even leave Joburg. Is the weather usually like this? Often. I’m not saying any more. The only alternative landing strip is Ascension, a 90-minute diversion each way.
There is also an existential argument against the airport: for visitors, the voyage and the island’s remoteness are part of the appeal; the kind of rushed rich who might be attracted by a novel addition to the global air map seem unlikely to be enchanted by St Helena’s subtle charms. Tourist infrastructure is close to zero: there is a shortage of almost everything - hotel beds, restaurants, taxis, hire cars, buses, even souvenirs. There are no beaches worth mentioning. Mobiles only arrived in 2015, and there is no roaming facility. The internet is slow, patchy and pricy. When Chris Pickard, an expert in Latin American travel, was interviewed last year for the job of head of tourism, he was asked to name St Helena’s chief attraction to visitors. Isolation, he replied. You’ve just lost it.
Picnicking at Castle Gardens Jamestown left; On the 699-step Jacob’s Ladder Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Picnicking at Castle Gardens, Jamestown, left; On the 699-step Jacob’s Ladder
Even so, Pickard got the job and is very upbeat. You mustn’t make the mistake of thinking this is a mainstream destination, he says. Some of the places people build in the Amazon nowadays are amazing and that’s the sort of thing we have to look at. This is primarily about nature and walking; for people who read Wanderlust magazine. And don’t forget the deep-sea fishing and diving markets, he adds, warming to his subject. If there isn’t great fishing off this island, where is there? And the Napoleon market is underestimated. Air schedules will allow for a little more flexibility. But we’ll still be remote in the middle of the Atlantic.
Yet this paradise is not a pristine one. In many ways humanity’s discovery of St Helena gave it the worst of both worlds. Man ravaged the indigenous flora and fauna, much of it found nowhere else, without providing a lasting base of either industry or agriculture. While, in theory, this is an island where you can grow almost anything, fresh vegetables are hard to find and fresh fruit even harder.
My grandfather was a ship’s chandler, says Capt Young. All his contacts would deliver fresh produce and any type of vegetable the ships wanted.
Whispered doubts persist the overhanging rock that dominates the approach path will be a nightmare for pilots as will the mist and fog for which St Helena’s highlands are infamous Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Whispered doubts persist: the overhanging rock that dominates the approach path will be a nightmare for pilots, as will the mist and fog for which St Helena’s highlands are infamous
And now you’ve got a hold full of South African potatoes and onions heading to St Helena, I say. That’s mad, isn’t it? It is mad.
One of the island’s loveliest corners is called Lemon Tree Valley but it no longer has any lemon trees. You can still grow anything here but it costs too much,explains Rebecca Cairns-Wicks, an English biologist married to a Saint and operations director of the St Helena National Trust. The place is plagued by wilts, blight, fruit fly and soil erosion. We’ve got a legacy of environmental mismanagement. Before man there were no mammals, no reptiles, no amphibians. Now we even have an invasive liverwort which feeds on native mosses.
The ecology of a small island is especially challenging because its species have such a small range, and then St Helena is full of microclimates and micro-ecologies. The St Helena olive tree went extinct in 2003, says Cairns-Wicks. I watched the last one die and I couldn’t save it. It was so horrid. I said at the time I wanted it not to have died in vain, and that it would never happen again.
While two other native trees, the bastard gumwood and the St Helena ebony, are now being nursed back after going down to the last two, 300 of the island’s 400 unique invertebrates are under threat of extinction.
Flax, the imported plant that sustained St Helena’s balance sheet until rope-makers found cheaper artificial alternatives, now runs rampant across the countryside, strangling competitors. For older islanders it does not bring back happy memories. Basil George, just turned 80, had a barefoot childhood before becoming a labourer in South Africa, then returned home to become a policeman, teacher, headmaster, chief education officer, poet, potter and tour guide. We were poor because the flax industry was paying a pittance. We never actually went without food and we did have shoes, but only for Sundays. Most of us were brought up in a good British tradition. You had to be resourceful, you had to have manners.
Though a Thatcher-era law (repealed in 2002) deprived the Saints of full British citizenship, the poverty eased in the 1980s. The Falklands war created job opportunities working for the garrisons in both the Falklands and Ascension. It remains potentially more lucrative to clean latrines in Port Stanley than aspire to middle management in Jamestown.
From left the first test flight lands at Prosperous Bay in 2015; the airport fire service; and the new airport terminal and control tower Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
From left: the first test flight lands at Prosperous Bay in 2015; the airport fire service; and, the new airport terminal and control tower
Some exiles do very well. Remittances from abroad have supported the economy and brought hundreds of new homes, largely self-built with neighbour-labour. We run a very informal economy in a global free market,says George. But 80 per cent of us have our own family homes. That’s an indicator of how far we’ve come. And we have 80 different charitable organisations. That’s a strong civil society.
Nonetheless, the island endures other problems. There are more deaths than births. And, though there is a labour shortage, partly due to the boom created by the airport construction, wages remain terrible: expats on short-term contracts earn two, three, four times more than their local equivalents, depending how you do the calculations.
The tradition of emigration helps explain the lack of entrepreneurs that so frustrates the chief secretary. This also bothers Mandy Peters, now 51, who left school at 15 but has risen to become chief executive of Solomon’s, the livestock to retail conglomerate that dominates much of the island’s business. We have a very strong senior management team (unusually, almost all home-grown - eight Saints and one Nigerian). But we sometimes struggle to get people to step up. There’s a lack of taking responsibility, of wanting to take responsibility. Or, as one incomer puts it more bluntly, The ones with get up and go have got up and gone.
This manifests itself even more starkly in St Helena’s appalling politics. The most-used word on the island is theythey are doing this; they want that. It is never wholly clear who they are: some amalgam of the government and the elite - but nearly all of them definitely here-today, gone-tomorrow expats.
There is an elected legislative council that selects an executive, which, according to the St Helena government website, advises the governor in most areas of government policy. I looked in on one of its meetings, and the tone was supplicatory, not executive. It is astonishing that a territory with sparky, intelligent people who thrive overseas should be governed as if this were 1890.
Mandy Peters chief executive of Solomon’s left and May Young at her shop in Jamestown Saint Helena Island Info Read articles about St Helena
Mandy Peters, chief executive of Solomon’s, left, and May Young at her shop in Jamestown
Three years ago a plan to have a chief councillor, a role that might have mutated into one of leadership, was heavily defeated in a referendum with a 10 per cent turnout. This feels like a terrible decision. One visiting scientist calls the islanders’ situation learnt helplessness, the fate that afflicts wild animals brought up in zoos. The population are used to following outside orders, says Dancoisne-Martineau. The mentality has become deeply rooted.
It is not just the islanders’ fault. They [that word again] are really into secrecy, even on the most insignificant things, Dancoisne-Martineau adds. This is a universal opinion and, as a result, distrust of the government is also universal. In such a tight-knit community, rumour spreads like the leftover flax plants, strangling the few truths that exist. The Saints’ deep-rooted belief in God and the royal family is nothing like as strong as their certainty that the airport is primarily intended as a British military base, which makes no sense. Rumour is equally convinced that the airport will not be ready for the opening ceremony, scheduled for May, and that the RMS will have to stay in service beyond its planned farewell in July.
The failings of government in St Helena were exposed last month by the publication of a report into allegations of widespread child abuse, by Sasha Wass QC (who led the successful prosecution case against Rolf Harris). Wass concluded that the stories of depravity were massively exaggerated but also found the St Helena government secretive, and had trouble getting access to the relevant files - she discovered that hers was the 35thoutside report into child abuse on St Helena since 1998.
In her report, she criticised the present governor, Governor Mark Capes, quoting local interviewees who called him a headmaster and colonial, while also accusing him of abnegating responsibility by over-delegating: The Governor of St Helena’s august title belies the need for a shirt-sleeved manager.
Distrust of the government is universal…The Saints’ deep-rooted faith in God and the royal family is nothing like as strong as their certainty that the airport is primarily intended as a British military base
The word I heard most often to describe Capes was remote, like the island itself, though no man can successfully be an island in a community the size of a small English market town. Capes, however, was overseas when I visited, and not available for interview in the UK either. The kindest opinions do give him credit for driving through the airport project.
I was outraged by an incident, recounted in Wass’ report, whereby Capes used a power to dissolve the legislative council because it seemed unlikely to agree to his plan to build a new prison in Jamestown’s main residential suburb, Half Tree Hollow. The present tiny Victorian jail is a slum and needs to move but the new site should obviously be decided by the islanders who must live with it, not some London-appointed satrap who will be gone before 2016 is out. The last native-born governor was appointed in 1873, before even Jonathan arrived.
The relationship with all the governors seems mutually abusive. The Saints I met struggle to remember the names but they do remember their occasional humiliations: the one who suffered a petition against his rule, the one who was locked in his office by protesters and had his tie pulled, and the one who almost fell in the water, plumed hat and all, when greeting Prince Andrew.
You should have the job, I say, only half-teasingly, to Basil George. No St Helenian wants to be admiral of a rowing boat, he replies. Especially if it has only one oar in the water.
For all that, I found St Helena a magical place. It matches Trinidad or New Orleans for parades. It is also the global capital of nicknaming: older islanders can instantly identify the likes of ‘Pickaxe’, ‘Jesus’, ‘Darlings’, ‘Fishcake’, ‘Tommy Punch’, ‘Teabag’{9}, ‘New Pence’ and ‘Fartegg’.
Two incidents brought home the sense of community. One came on my first - hot - afternoon when, having failed to find tea (nothing open), I walked up the hill to the edge of Jamestown and began to crave an ice-cream. Eventually, I found a small, rather random little shop of the sort lost to Britain in the 1950s. A kindly grey-haired woman was behind the counter. Do you have any ice-cream, please? No, sorry. But Dora might. I’ll phone her. No ice-cream, only ice lollies, she reported back. That would be lovely. So she instructed a small girl to lead me across the road to a private house where Dora sold me a 50p lolly from her back door. (Later, I went back and asked the shopkeeper her name. May Young, she said. Any relation to Rodney, the captain? I’m his mama! she replied proudly.)
Something even more telling came when I visited the island production of Cinderella. It was a typical English village-hall pantomime, except for one thing: in the audience were various clients of Shape, St Helena’s charity for the disabled. Some were severely handicapped mentally, and screamed so loudly at the wrong moments that the actors could barely be heard. In England there would have been shushing and dirty looks, and the embarrassed carers would have wheeled their charges out. But, on St Helena, these were not anonymous sad cases, they were all known: somebody’s brother, somebody’s son. They had a right to be there.
The islanders have too many people lost from sight. The boat that took me home was also taking the émigrés back to Ascension after Christmas. The atmosphere on board was far more sombre than on the journey from Cape Town. And the requests on Saint FM that morning included ‘When Will I See You Again?’, ‘Goodbye is the Saddest Word’ and, of course, ‘Sailing’. The tears on the quayside were real and poignant. I heard one teenage boy saying goodbye to his mate: Jimmy. Have a nice… he groped for the word …Life, he said finally.
Me, I ache to return. And I hope for good news. That would include new industry, though Enterprise St Helena’s impressive brochure for investors does not include my own big idea: it would be the perfect setting in terms of both growing conditions and security for Britain’s first legal marijuana farm. Nor does the brochure mention the obvious site for the much-needed new hotel: Governor Capes’ underused mansion. This is not that radical an idea: it was suggested in 1938 by the island’s historian, Philip Gosse.
My fear, though, is that the airport will not generate enough tourism to make a real difference. And if it did, then St Helena’s fragile human ecology would soon go the way of its natural balance. I do hope for the continued health of Jonathan. The local vet Joe Hollins is certain the giant tortoise is now blind but has repaired his beak to help him graze, and supplemented his diet with fresh fruit, which, ironically, most islanders struggle to get.
What the island needs most of all, however, is a successor to its most famous resident of all. It needs its own home-grown Napoleon - more pacific but equally forceful - to give it the leadership and self-respect it deserves.
Our Comment: This article sets out many challenges for our new Governor, when she takes office in April 2016.