[QUOTE=Celuiquicherche;1208684]Till next time[/QUOTE]I will be in Mali mid November. Is it possible to have contact details about the girls.
Thanks
Printable View
[QUOTE=Celuiquicherche;1208684]Till next time[/QUOTE]I will be in Mali mid November. Is it possible to have contact details about the girls.
Thanks
I will be again in Mali mid November. Friends sugested the new hotel COCCINELLE. Does someone have experiences with the hotel and is it girl friendly?
Thanks a lot for your help
[QUOTE=Henri2; 1210292]Is it possible to have contact details about the girls.
Thanks[/QUOTE]I would appreciate it to.
Thanks
[QUOTE=Henri2; 1210294]I will be again in Mali mid November. Friends sugested the new hotel COCCINELLE. Does someone have experiences with the hotel and is it girl friendly?
Thanks a lot for your help[/QUOTE]I have no experience with this hotel, but it seems to be good.
Anyway, any hotel in Mali is girl friendly.
[QUOTE=Otari; 1211044]I would appreciate it to.
Thanks[/QUOTE]Don't worry!
You don't have to find or seek for girls.
They will find you anywhere.
Even If you don't have anything in mind
[QUOTE=Celuiquicherche; 1212651]Don't worry!
You don't have to find or seek for girls.
They will find you anywhere.
Even If you don't have anything in mind[/QUOTE]That's cool. Can you give, please, anyway some details – addresses, place to be etc?
As already mentionned I will be in Bamako next week. Last time a door men at the laico hotel gave me a telephone number of a good looking girl semi-pro with good performances. Do someone have some advices how to contact semi pro girls in Bamako. I don't like to go to dancing, pubs or other public places.
Thanks
[QUOTE=Henri2; 1215057]As already mentionned I will be in Bamako next week. Last time a door men at the laico hotel gave me a telephone number of a good looking girl semi-pro with good performances. Do someone have some advices how to contact semi pro girls in Bamako. I don't like to go to dancing, pubs or other public places.
Thanks[/QUOTE]Its very easy. Ask any younger dude if they know any cute girls. Deed done.
Or even approach any cute girl and ask them if they have any friends that could "show you around town". If they don't immediately offer themselves, they will surely rush to get one of their 'sisters' who could be anyone in the extended family.
It's all seen as a golden opportunity. At minimum, its a chance for a decent payday and a rare opportunity to hang out at higher end joints. If they're lucky, it's their ticket out of endless poverty.
[QUOTE=Scout123; 1215618]Its very easy. Ask any younger dude if they know any cute girls. Deed done.
Or even approach any cute girl and ask them if they have any friends that could "show you around town". If they don't immediately offer themselves, they will surely rush to get one of their 'sisters' who could be anyone in the extended family.
It's all seen as a golden opportunity. At minimum, its a chance for a decent payday and a rare opportunity to hang out at higher end joints. If they're lucky, it's their ticket out of endless poverty.[/QUOTE]Thanks a lot for this golden advice.
Fellow Mongerers,
I've been in Bamako for about a week and will be here for another three weeks andd would like to know 1) Are there any fellow Mongerers available in Bamako? 2) Any advice or contacts for Mongereing activity would me much appreciated!
By the way- The Radisson Hotel has the best rooms in my humble opinion.
Sean
i have never been to mali, and probably never will. i did see this news story on 3 american soldiers who died in a car crash, accompanied by 3 moroccan prostitutes, according to the washington post. news story below. sad.
mysterious fatal crash offers rare look at usa commando presence in mali.
by craig whitlock, published: july 8, 2012.
in pre-dawn darkness, a *toyota land cruiser skidded off a bridge in north africa in the spring, plunging into the niger river. when rescuers arrived, they found the bodies of three usa army commandos — alongside three dead women.
what the men were doing in the impoverished country of mali, and why they were still there a month after the united states suspended military relations with its government, is at the crux of a mystery that officials have not fully explained even 10 weeks later.
at the very least, the april 20 accident exposed a team of special operations forces that had been working for months in mali, a saharan country racked by civil war and a rising islamist insurgency. more broadly, the crash has provided a rare glimpse of elite usa commando units in north africa, where they have been secretly engaged in counterterrorism actions against al-qaeda affiliates.
the obama administration has not publicly acknowledged the existence of the missions, although it has spoken in general about plans to rely on special operations forces as a cornerstone of its global counterterrorism strategy. in recent years, the pentagon has swelled the ranks and resources of the special operations command, which includes such units as the navy seals and the army's delta force, even as the overall number of usa troops is shrinking.
at the same time, the crash in mali has revealed some details of the commandos' clandestine activities that apparently had little to do with counterterrorism. the women killed in the wreck were identified as moroccan prostitutes who had been riding with the soldiers, according to a senior army official and a usa counterterrorism consultant briefed on the incident, both of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.
the army's criminal investigation command, which is conducting a probe of the fatal plunge off the martyrs bridge in bamako, the capital of mali, said it does not suspect foul play but has 'not completely ruled it out. ' other army officials cited poor road conditions and excessive speed as the likely cause of the 5 a. m. crash.
usa officials have revealed few details about the soldiers' mission or their backgrounds, beyond a brief news release announcing their deaths hours after the accident.
in many countries, including most in africa, special operations forces work openly to distribute humanitarian aid and train local militaries. at times, the civil-affairs assignments can provide credible cover for clandestine counterterrorism units.
but in mali, usa military personnel had ceased all training and civil-affairs work by the end of march, about a week after the country's democratically elected president was overthrown in a military coup.
the military's africa command, which oversees operations on the continent, said the three service members killed were among 'a small number of personnel' who had been aiding the malian military before the coup and had remained in the country to 'provide assistance to the usa embassy' and 'maintain situational awareness on the unfolding events. '
megan larson-kone, a public affairs officer for the usa embassy in mali, said the soldiers had stayed in bamako because they were 'winding down' civil-
affairs programs in the aftermath of the coup while holding out hope 'that things would turn around quickly' so they could resume their work.
two of the soldiers, capt. *daniel h. utley. 33, and sgt. 1st class marciano e. myrthil. 39, were members of the 91st civil affairs battalion. 95th civil affairs brigade, which is based at fort bragg, n. c.
for two months after the crash, the usa military withheld the identity of the third soldier killed. in response to inquiries from the washington post, the army named him as master sgt. trevor j. bast. 39, a communications technician with the intelligence and security command at fort belvoir.
the intelligence and security command is a little-known and secretive branch of the army that specializes in communications intercepts. its personnel often work closely with the military's joint special operations command, which oversees missions to capture or kill terrorism suspects overseas.
during his two decades of service, bast revealed little about the nature of his work to his family. 'he did not tell us a lot about his life, and we respected that for security purposes, ' his mother, thelma bast of gaylord, mich, said in a brief interview. 'we never asked questions, and that's the honest truth. '
No USA military here polluting this lovely and welcoming city Bamako. For nightclubs, Byblos getting the biggest crowds. Ibiza next door the second string (note that 5,000 XOF entry was waived for foreigner). Others in Hippodromo, after midnight crowd heads out from Terrace to VIP or Excess. Or, go across the river to BBN (three Euro cab fare) sit outside at restaurant can meet something, or go into disco. Non-French speaking? Stay in Pattaya, or Angeles City or anywhere else, you'd only be frustrating yourself here unless you content with pure commercial transaction to make yourself happy.
I am Damo, I live in Bamako. I can be a guide for tourist who need girl in Bamako. But I am available to women who need a companion to the sejour in Bamako. Contact me.
[blue][Email address deleted by Admin][/blue]
[u][b]EDITOR's NOTE[/b][/u]: [blue]This report was edited to [u]remove email addresses in the text[/u]. Please do not post email addresses in the Forum. Instead, please invite other Forum Members to contact you directly via the Forum's Private Messaging system. [i]Thanks![/i][/blue]
I've spent a couple of nights in Bamako this week. Last night I was at the Byblos and the place was rocking. Variety of local girls and also some CIS who looked semi-pro. I was with a client and therefore could not indulge, but well worth a visit if you are in town.
I stayed at Radisson Blu. No signs of any action here, but a decent Euro standard hotel with good security.