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Flamme de la Paix
Sept. 25
Agadez
6:30am

In a few short hours President Tandja will light the Flamme de la Paix - the "flame of peace" - Niger's symbolic return to peace after a six year armed Touareg rebellion. As part of the festivities we will erect the life-sized skeleton of Suchomimus. It will be first time many attendees will have ever seen a dinosaur in their lives

We travel in caravan through Agadez from our walled adobe compound to the site of the Flamme; three Land Rovers decorated with logos from dinosaur expeditions and a 50-foot-long flat bed truck stacked with four enormous wooden crates that we shipped as cargo from Chicago. In the crates rests the skeleton of Suchomimus.

Flyers with the light-blue oval symbol of the Flamme de la Paix are everywhere. In anticipation of the arrival of President Tandja, people are beginning to gather. On one corner a band is setting up with an outdated amplifier and a bright white new electric guitar. A painted cloth reads "Flamme de la Paix Restaurant."


The Flamme de la Paix logo

On this national holiday all eyes will be on Agadez. Hotels are full and the Agadez airport received more planes in a day than it usually does in a month. Presidents and prime ministers from Burkina Faso, Mali, Chad, and representatives from Sierra Leone, the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as a representative from the office of U. N. Secretary General Kofi Anan, have arrived for the event

7:10am

The site is a few dusty kilometers out of town. We start to unpack the dinosaur immediately. It is already past seven and the formal ceremonies begin at 10:00. We have less than three hours to erect Suchomimus.

Other people are also working to get the site ready. Weapons are already piled into a 25-foot wide hexagonal concrete moat, awaiting a torch from the President. Security guards in red berets flank the discarded arms.


A pile of weapons will be burned to symbolically mark
the end of the rebellion.

Every few minutes another truck, car or bus arrives filled with people dressed in their finest. The Targui (Touareg women) wear black or white loose tops over matching wrap-around skirts appliquéd with red embroidery and gold or silver sequins; midnight blue head wraps stain their foreheads purple; Hausa women are adorned in brightly colored batiked fabric with matching head wraps tied high and stiff on their heads.

Crowds are beginning to gather along the roped-off parade grounds.

9:00am

Putting Suchomimus Together

All the crates are open - not an easy task since we have no power tools; everything has to be done by hand. We maneuver the Land Rovers around the flat bed truck to serve as makeshift ladders so that people can reach the tops of the tallest crates.


The team strains to lift a packing cushion out
of one of the Suchomimus crates.


The hips and legs are heavy we need a crane to help us lift
them out of the container.

As we remove the grey foam surrounding the casts of the bones, it becomes clear we will need the crane to help lift out the heavy pelvis section.

The skeleton is 27 feet long and 12 feet high at the hip. The replicas of the bones are strung on an iron armature (frame) that fits together in seven main pieces. The legs and pelvis are the heaviest. Two poles running through the legs are screwed onto a large metal base with wheels. Once the legs are up (with assistance from the crane) the work goes quickly.


Jack is about to bring the right arm and shoulder blade
over to the skeleton.


Paul attaches the skull and completes the skeleton
as hundreds of people look on.

In teams we carry over the back half of the spine and then, standing on a Land Rover, fit in the long stiff tail section. Next we carry the front half of the backbone and neck, fit in the ribs and attach the arms. Last, the head, a four-foot long, four-inch wide, fishing machine with a cage of sharp, curved teeth at the front.

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Written By Gabrielle Lyon - All Photographs by Mike Hettwer unless noted
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