The Safari is like no other event in the FIA World Rally Championship. To millions of people around the world it
is the ultimate rally and as legendary as the famous Rallye Monte Carlo.
In fact, what started out as a fun event for keen amateurs back in 1953 has evolved into the jewel of the sports
calendar. Some of the worlds largest and most successful car manufacturers compete, but the private entrants are still
there. The sense of adventure and camaraderie is quite unique; few leave without a tale or two to tell, and even fewer can
resist returning to a land of such rich contrasts, natural beauty and phenomenal space.


George Donaldson Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart Team Manager
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In terms of entrants and distance, the Safari Rally may be a shadow of its former self. At its peak in 1971, the year
Shekhar Mehta - the current President of the Rallies Commission - finished second, a record 112 crews started and the route
covered 6,400 kilometres. Today, entries number around 55 and the distance covered is approximately 2,500 kilometres, but
all the unique qualities and challenges remain.
George Donaldson, Team Manager for Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart, is a veteran of the Safari Rally and, even though he has
travelled to some of the most spectacular and exotic countries in the world, all the superlatives come into play in his
memories of Africa.
"Kenya is, without question, my favourite rally in the world," he says. "Why? The distances, the views, the fact
that the cars are charging along flat out for over 100 kilometres sometimes. Its a road race basically, an absolutely
fantastic thing to do. On the occasions Ive had the opportunity to stand and watch the cars going across a plain for
30 or 40 kilometres, watching the helicopters above and the dust plumes... what a fantastic experience. Its the
biggest show we do, lovely! "
"What else...? Its hot, I like the heat, and the people are maximum friendly. I swear sometimes that I could stop
at a certain place and ask myself where am I, and I could look round and say I could be in the Scottish
highlands! A wee while later I could be in Finland and then Im in the jungle with Tarzan and Jane just up the road!
And where else can you stand four kilometres from the Equator and be on a glacier? The history of the place is amazing. When
the first people trekked through Africa and reported back to the National Geographic Society in London that, just five days
walk from the coast and so close to the Equator, there was a snow-covered mountain, an extinct volcano, that had to be 50
miles across and 19,000 feet high. The guy was laughed out of the Society, but its there".


Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution T. Makinen / R. Mannisenmaki during the 2000 Safari Rally
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"My first visit to Kenya was in 1986 and I was there for seven weeks for the testing, recce and rally. In the last 15
years I would say Ive spent maybe three in Kenya. Ive got lots of good friends there, people like Ian Duncan
whos been a very good friend over the years, Shekhar (Mehta) whos originally from Africa, Mike Kirkland, Robin
Ulyate, Ian Kelsall, Ivan Smith, former Clerks of the Course, Mike Doughty, Peter and his son Mike Hughes, Nick Theuri, the
press officer for so many years. They and many others, theyre all fantastic. The workshop staff I have employed
locally, Isaac Aseki. There are waiters in restaurants Ive gone to for the past 15 years, John Mwangi in my favourite
Chinese! And the doormen in hotels, the staff at the Serena Hotel where Ive stayed on and off for those 15 years. The
welcome is incredible, and theres nothing like it anywhere else".
"Id been to the Ivory Coast before, but Ill never forget my first impressions when I arrived in Kenya in
1986. I was collected from the airport and going straight to the workshop, but to see African women working in the fields by
the side of the road with children tied to their backs, using hand hoes that couldve been used 2000 years ago, was
unreal, a big culture shock".
"Over the years you certainly learn to understand the cultural differences and the limit of what you, as an individual,
can do. You learn to deal with the difficulties of Africa and have big contingency plans for everything. Just getting our
freight from Mombassa used to be a logistical nightmare. The railway was always very unreliable so in the end we used to
drive all the containers up to Nairobi, it was a serious convoy and dangerous, but if everything was on the train and it
broke down it could take weeks to get fixed. One year I remember persuading our engineers that it was a complete waste of
time to take a helicopter out to find the train which was stuck somewhere like Mtito Andei (great names as well!). He
reckoned he could get some trucks down there, with the customs people, and off-load everything in the middle of no where.
It just doesnt work like that, you cant ride roughshod over the local procedures in Africa just because their
systems are different to ours. Its all about cultural differences, and thats what makes life so rich and
colourful".


Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart Mitsubishi Carisma GT F. Loix / S. Smeets during the 2000 Safari Rally
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"Ive seen bad things in Kenya as well, things that are possibly borne from a lack of understanding. I stood and
watched the Lancia helicopter go down; the tail lifted and the nose went in and there was a complete loss of power and it
crashed. But amazingly I then witnessed the mechanics running away from the wreckage towards the rally car with their
toolboxes. Unbelievable! Ive been in a comms aircraft taking off from Eldoret Aerodrome thats had to seriously
bank left and right to get through a 50 metre gap between trees 500 metres after takeoff because it could not climb away,
that was frightening. The gap was only there because of an aircraft crashing there a few weeks earlier... It then took us
five minutes to make 1000 feet, we just couldnt get the altitude with too much fuel at the wrong time of time of day.
Taking off from Lake Baringo in a light twin-engine aircraft, we picked up most of the bushes on the undercarriage and the
props were chopping through the trees! How it still flew... I dont know".
"This rallys slightly later in the season this year, hopefully to avoid some of the really wet weather weve
had in the past. Well see, I think the climates changing everywhere around the world and these days you can have
a rough idea of what to expect, but nothings guaranteed. As a team were obviously looking for a good run. The
Mitsubishi is strong and reliable and I dont really see any reason why either Tommi or Freddy cant pull
something special out of the bag. Sure, the competition is strong, but this is a very tactical rally that has to be driven
with your head, not your foot. Okay, Freddy doesnt possibly have the best memories - although hes not one to
dwell on such things - but Tommis won with Mitsubishi in the past and obviously knows how to win this rally. I think
for any driver to be able to say theyve won the Safari is a massive achievement and it would be great to think the
Marlboro Mitsubishi Ralliart guys could be at the centre of what is always a memorable victory party in Kenya..."