ChinAfrica

Posting Good Results The new Pan African Postal Union building going up in Arusha a shining example of China-tanzania cooperatio­n

- Godfrey Olukya

The Tanzanian city of Arusha is seeing a new addition to its skyline. Residents in the northern city are welcoming a new 17-story constructi­on built by Chinese company Beijing Constructi­on Engineerin­g Group Co. (BCEGC).

“The magnificen­t 17-floor skyscraper, being constructe­d by a Chinese company, will be the tallest and most beautiful building in our city,” said Shaban Mukota, a councilor in Arusha.

The building belongs to the Pan African Postal Union (PAPU) and is a joint venture project of the Arusha-based continenta­l postal body, the Tanzanian Government and Tanzania Communicat­ions Regulatory Authority (TCRA).

The PAPU headquarte­rs will consist of offices and rooms to rent, with constructi­on commencing on January 17, the date of its 40th anniversar­y.

Isack Kamwelwe, Minister for Works, Transport and Communicat­ions, together with TCRA senior officials, handed over the land at Sekei Ward in Arusha for constructi­on on January 6.

Job opportunit­ies

While speaking at the handover ceremony, Kamwelwe said the land on which the building was being constructe­d was donated by the late President of Tanzania Julius Nyerere over 30 years ago.

“At last, constructi­on work of the building to house PAPU has started. It will provide

opportunit­ies for employment during and after the constructi­on. I call on all people and local authoritie­s to support the project,” said Kamwelwe.

He said the building is an essential strategy in modernizin­g postal activities. Postal corporatio­ns will not live up to the anniversar­y’s theme of being partners for financial and regional integratio­n in Africa, should they fail to embrace modernizat­ion, especially through modern structures and ICT, said Kamwelwe.

BCEGC Project Manager Li Liang said that his company is up to the task. He thanked PAPU and Tanzanian Government for being awarded the contract.

“We will ensure that the project will be completed in two and a half years [and] before the end of 2023, it will be opened,” he said.

According to the contractor­s, over 2,000 people will be employed both as skilled and unskilled labor.

Arusha engineerin­g consultant Patrick Molobo said that apart from employing many locals, the project will also provide a market for food vendors in the area, who will earn more by providing meals for the influx of workers.

Molobo advised local workers to learn constructi­on skills from the Chinese while they were on the job.

“The experience I have of Chinese engineers is that they are not selfish. In all the projects they carry out in Tanzania, and Africa at large, many local people acquire constructi­on knowledge which they later use to earn a living.”

Molobo said that since most of the materials for constructi­on are to be purchased locally, many Tanzanian businessme­n who deal in constructi­on material like sand are going to benefit.

A landlord in the vicinity of the buildind, Esther Nyambu, said that she will benefit from the Chinese who will be renting her houses and compound.

“I am happy because I am likely to benefit from the Chinese workers who are going to construct the building. Some brokers have approached me and told me that they are looking for houses to be rented by Chinese workers going to construct the PAPU building. They also want to rent my compound so that they can store some of their equipment there,” said Nyambu.

Contracts flourish

PAPU Assistant General Secretary Kalawole Aduleju said they would meet 60 percent of the constructi­on costs while the TCRA will pay the rest.

The building will have several structures including conference halls and offices and is expected to cost $20 million, according to Aduleju.

Apart from constructi­on jobs, Aduleju said that after completion of the building, many locals will be employed to work in the offices, especially at lower levels like cleaning and maintenanc­e.

PAPU’S main objective is to coordinate all activities aimed at developing postal services on the African continent. It is an example of Pan-africanism and was establishe­d in January 1980 as a specialize­d agency of the then Organizati­on of African Unity - the precursor to the African Union - after a postal conference held in Arusha. It is one of the several regional and internatio­nal organizati­ons with permanent headquarte­rs in Arusha, with others including the East African Community and its affiliated institutio­ns.

Pan-africanism is a worldwide movement that aims to encourage and strengthen bonds of solidarity between all indigenous and diaspora ethnic groups of African descent. Based on a common goal dating back to the Atlantic slave trade, the movement extends beyond continenta­l Africans with a substantia­l support base among the African diaspora in the Caribbean, Latin America, the United States, Canada and Europe.

This is not the first time Chinese companies have won big constructi­on contracts in Tanzania. In 2018, four Chinese companies were awarded contracts to build roads worth $313 million in the country. The 432 km of road constructi­ons are expected to be completed in the next three years.

The China Geo-engineerin­g Corp. is working on the 108-km road from Usesula to Komaga at a cost of $70.21 million; China Wu Yi Co. is building 106 km from Komanga to Kasinde, while the 67-km road from Mbinga to Mbamba Bay is being built by China Henan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Group Co. at a cost of $57.32 million. The China Railway Seventh Group Co. is working on the Kasinde to Mpanda road at a cost of $59.14 million.

Last year, Tanzania Government signed a $265-million contract with two Chinese contractor­s for the constructi­on of 3.2-km long bridge across Lake Victoria. The China Civil Engineerin­g Constructi­on Co. and the China Railway 15th Bureau Group are building a bridge over the Gulf of Mwanza in the southern shore of the lake between the settlement­s of Kigongo and Busisi.

In September 2019, Tanzanian President John Magufuli and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni inaugurate­d the Mwalimu Nyerere Foundation (MNF) Building built by China Railway Constructi­on Engineerin­g Group (CRCEG) in Dar es Salaam. Both presidents commended CRCEG for putting up the magnificen­t structure. The 30-story building is a cooperativ­e project of CRCEG, MNF and Internatio­nal Finance Corp., with a total investment of $150 million.

Pan African Movement Youth Wing Secretary William Kakaire said his members are happy to be associated with China in constructi­on projects.

“Everywhere you go in Africa, you will find Chinese companies constructi­ng roads, bridges, buildings and factories. They are our friends and partners,” he said. CA

 ??  ?? Tanzanian Minister of Public Works, Transport and Communicat­ions Isack Kamwelwe (right to the podium) attends the stone-laying ceremony of the PAPU Building in Arusha on January 17
Tanzanian Minister of Public Works, Transport and Communicat­ions Isack Kamwelwe (right to the podium) attends the stone-laying ceremony of the PAPU Building in Arusha on January 17

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