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Old April 6th 06, 08:24 PM posted to sci.space.shuttle,sci.space.history
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Default Anybody ever hear of this guy in the REAL space shuttle program?

Anybody ever hear of this guy in the REAL space shuttle program?

'Millionaire' ex-space expert stuck in Kenya prison

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http://www.eastandard.net/hm_news/ne...eid=1143950605 (has
bizarre photo of him there)



By Cyrus Kinyungu

Just leave if you don't have a cigarrette. I'm not talking to you if
you do not give me a cigarette now."

Those were the first words of Christopher Timothy Tanton, a former
shuttle designer with the American National Aeronautical and Space
Administration (NASA), at Industrial Area Prison.

An agitated Tanton was about to begin this interview on his experience
in the country that he has fallen in love with.

"I need to calm my nerves, do you have a cigarette? Are you deaf?"
repeated Tanton, who was in slippers, blue jeans, a pair of shorts, a
sleeveless brown khaki jacket and a dark blue striped T-shirt, looking
menacingly into my eyes.

He is a space scientist, but the 57-year-old Briton has faced more
difficulty in Kenya than he has in designing complicated space shuttles.

Tanton, who is waiting for deportation to Britain for being in the
country illegally, hopes that his "worst experience in life" will soon be
over.

"I will smoke any type of cigarettes," he says, a smile forming on his
lips hiding behind a moustache and long beards. His sunken eyes brighten
when asked what brand he wants.

True to his word, Tanton remains stubbornly silent, pacing up and down
the interview room as he refuses to talk or listen to anyone until the
prison authorities allow him to smoke.

To him, his work experience at the US premier space agency is nothing
to write about compared to his past few months in Kenya.

Indeed, he is looking forward to leaving jail to start scribbling the
first lines of what he believes would be "a very interesting book".

His story was highlighted in the media last week when two airlines
declined to fly him to his motherland on alleged fears of safety.

"I am an international traveller and a millionaire and I should not be
in jail. I have never been to jail before and this life is really
difficult," said the bearded man.

"My tribulations started while on my way to the airport in a taxi when
I lost my passport and other valuables," said Tanton, now a different man
altogether after he was assured of a puff.

After getting comfortable in a chair amid bluish-white smoke, Tanton
resumes his story. He says when he went to Central Police Station, Nairobi,
to report the loss of his passport, the officers just laughed at him.

"They just laughed at me saying this is another mzungu who has been
robbed," he said, adding that he walked out annoyed but hoping that he had
fulfilled a mandatory report to the police.

Tanton says he later went to the British High Commission where he made
a similar report and signed papers for the issuance of a new passport. But
they failed to give him an abstract.

Tanton says he had arrived in Africa on May 17, last year, on the
advice of doctors in England.

It was his first visit to the continent and he was accompanied by his
Kenyan girlfriend ,who lives in London, he says.

"My doctors in England advised me that because of my old age, the
possibility of cold winters in England were not good for my health because
of my activities like mountain climbing and sky diving," said Tanton.

The doctors, he says, advised him to consider moving to Africa where
there are no weather extremities like in Europe.

Tanton, who says he was then working as a freelance consultant design
engineer in London, adds that he had been suffering from bouts of arthritis
as a result of mountain climbing and sky diving.

"Sky diving is my main hobby," says a beaming Tanton, now puffing his
third cigarette.

In Kenya, he planned to put up a home, a church, a clinic and an
orphanage.

"I was preparing to go back to England and sell one of my three homes
and other properties before coming back to put up a home," he said, adding
that he also wanted to build another home in Tanzania.

He says he plans to seek Kenyan citizenship even after his
tribulations.

Tanton says that besides the three houses in England, he has about ten
top-of-the-range vehicles. He is also the proud owner of bank accounts in
America, Germany, England and Tanzania.

"The reason why I am saying that I am a millionaire is because if I
liquidate my property, I'll have a lot of money."

Born on June 10, 1948, at Lancashire in England, Tanton went to school
in same area before leaving to work in America and other parts of Europe.

"I was given a job by NASA because of my intelligence which they say
is higher above average. I was among the best ten in my area of specialty,"
brags Tanton.

But despite all that, he says he is "a humble man who likes to live a
free life".

That is why when he arrived in the country, he spent a month with his
friends in Dandora Phase Four, a poor neighbourhood in Nairobi, before
moving to Phase Five.

But his longest time in the country has been spent in police cells and
the Industrial Area remand prison.

Although he is not consistent about his stay in the cells, Tanton says
he has been shifting from Buru Buru police cells, Kenyatta National
Hospital, Airport police cells and the Industrial Area prison. These have
been his homes for the last six months.

The Briton is bitter with the British High Commission for neglecting
him at his hour of need.

"The British High Commission has done nothing to assist me," he says,
adding that he had seen officials there several times.

A Makadara magistrate, he says, did not find him guilty for being in
the country unlawfully, although the magistrate ordered his deportation last
November.

Last week, a senior Immigration official said attempts to deport him
failed when several airlines declined to fly him there. This was even after
tickets had been bought for him and those of his three escorts.

British Airways and Kenya Airways officials confirmed having turned
down the deportee.

Faced with the dilemma, the Immigration Department took Tanton to
prison where he will stay until they find an airline willing to fly him to
Britain.

British High Commission spokesman Mark Norton last week referred The
Standard's questions about Tanton to the Immigration Department. But he
expressed satisfaction with the way the Government was handling the Tanton
issue.