China Daily (Hong Kong)

Kenya’s railway gets rolling

The Chinese designed system links port with capital, other countries later

- By PAN ZHONGMING and LUCIE MORANGI in Nairobi Contact the writers at panzhongmi­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

Kenya has become the third African nation to launch a railway system built with Chinese technology.

The 472-kilometer standard gauge railway is billed as a game changer, linking the port of Mombasa to the capital of Nairobi, and later to more farflung areas and remote nations.

Ethiopia and Nigeria earlier launched their rail systems, also built with Chinese technology.

Color and pomp characteri­zed the ceremony that saw hundreds of Kenyans join President Uhuru Kenyatta, who inaugurate­d the train service in Mombasa on Wednesday.

In his speech, Uhuru said the $3.8 billion project is bound to drive the Kenyan economy into an industrial­ized, middle-income status as envisioned in the nation’s developmen­t blueprint, Vision 2030.

“It is the cornerston­e that will unite Kenyans and our neighbors by creating oppor- tunities and shared prosperity,” he said. “I express my sincere gratitude to President Xi Jinping and the people of China for the collaborat­ive support between our two countries.”

He emphasized the new system — which he named Madaraka Express, a reference to the commemorat­ion of Kenya gaining its sovereignt­y in 1964 — will spear- head socio-economic transforma­tion by lowering the cost of transporta­tion of both freight and passengers between the two cities, halve the time it takes from eight to four hours, generate jobs and open up remote areas.

Moreover, he said the introducto­ry prices are affordable to ensure more people and businesses have easy access. “Passengers will pay a minimum of $7 while containers that have previously been charged an average $1,000 will now pay 50 percent less,” he said.

In his speech, State Councilor Wang Yong, a special envoy of Xi, said, “This railway is an important early harvest outcome of the Belt and Road Initiative.

It is also a landmark project in China-Africa cooperatio­n on regional networks of highspeed rail, expressway and aviation, African industrial­ization and industrial capacity”.

It was built by China Road and Bridge Corp.

In 2015, Xi and Kenyatta jointly witnessed the signing of the agreement to finance the project. China financed 90 percent, with the remainder funded by the Kenyan government.

“The infrastruc­ture, once in use, is expected to improve speed and capacity of railway transport in Kenya, greatly improving trade between Mombasa and areas such as Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan and eastern parts of Democratic Republic of Congo,” said Robert Kagiri, the head of Nairobi think tank.

Kagiri, director of the Center for Strategic Policy Management at Africa Policy Institute, acknowledg­ed the wisdom of awarding the management and operation of the infrastruc­ture to a CRBC subsidiary, Australia-based John Holland.

“Having a foreign country run the railway is a ‘pathway’ to injecting profession­alism from an experience­d player and in the long run facilitati­ng knowledge (skills) transfer to the local people,” he said.

This railway is an important early harvest outcome of the Belt and Road Initiative.” Wang Yong, State Councilor

 ?? SUN RUIBO / XINHUA ?? Two train drivers pose for a selfie with a Kenyan journalist on Wednesday in the port city of Mombasa, where Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta inaugurate­d the country’s China-built railway, the Madaraka Express.
SUN RUIBO / XINHUA Two train drivers pose for a selfie with a Kenyan journalist on Wednesday in the port city of Mombasa, where Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta inaugurate­d the country’s China-built railway, the Madaraka Express.

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