Kuwait Times

Kenya unveils 1st new railway in a century

-

NAIROBI: More than a century after a colonial railway gave birth to modern Kenya, the country is betting on a new Chinese-built route to cement its position as the gateway to East Africa. The $3.2 billion (2.8 billion euro) railway linking Nairobi with the port city of Mombasa will Wednesday take its first passengers on the 472 kilometer journey, allowing them to skip a hairraisin­g drive on one of Kenya’s most dangerous highways.

The railway is the country’s biggest infrastruc­ture project since independen­ce, and while it has courted controvers­y, it is a key selling point for the ruling Jubilee party ahead of August elections. It is also part of a “master plan” by east African leaders to connect their nations by rail, with the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) planned to eventually link Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, Burundi and Ethiopia. “There is no country which has ever developed without having a very robust railway system. It was long overdue,” Kenya’s Transport Minister James Macharia told AFP. He said not upgrading the railway in over 100 years “has dragged us backwards in terms of developmen­t.”

The ‘Lunatic Express’

It was on May 30, 1896, that colonial Britain began building a railway from what is today Kenya’s coast to improve access to the riches of Uganda, showing little interest in the wild land in between. The railway, steeped in tales of swashbuckl­ing colonial adventure and beloved by tourists up until its last, creaking journey in April, is credited with shaping Kenya into its current form. The capital Nairobi, today a regional hub, was a swampy outpost with no particular attraction until it became the headquarte­rs of Kenya Railways. The constructi­on of the railway is the stuff of legend, with British and Indian workers terrorized by a pair of lions said to have devoured some 135 men. The train was later dubbed the “Lunatic Express”.

‘Bad negotiatio­ns’

Some see a touch of folly in its successor too. In as much as the old line traced the developmen­t of colonial Kenya, the new railway has proven a mirror for modern Kenya: dogged by corruption accusation­s, battling environmen­tal concerns while trying to position itself as the gateway to east Africa. The World Bank, and others, warned that building a new railway, instead of refurbishi­ng the old one, was by far the most expensive option.

However, the government went ahead with the project, skipping an open tender to make a direct deal with China-whose Export?Import Bank has loaned Kenya 90 percent of the venture’s cost. “We should ask: ‘Why did you negotiate this badly’?” said Kwame Owino, head of the Nairobi-based Institute of Economic Affairs. He points to similar Chinese-built railways in Ethiopia, Tanzania and elsewhere on the continent which cost much less per kilometre.

Macharia dismisses this argument, saying Kenya’s SGR could carry more cargo, and passes through trickier terrain. He said the government expects the railway to boost GDP by 1.5 percent, allowing them to pay back the loan “in about four years”. “I think that is a little bit of wishful thinking,” said Owino, questionin­g assumption­s about the volume of cargo available to be carried, while warning high growth rates in east Africa were beginning to moderate.

He said the government, whose debt has doubled in three years, would be forced to raise taxes to cover the bill. “My feeling as an economist is that it is going to be a white elephant, but as a taxpayer I hope not,” said Owino. Trucks currently take two days to carry goods from Mombasa to Nairobi, while the train will take eight hours. Passenger trains will take around five hours. The railway will be managed by the Chinese contractor for five years, with 610 Chinese workers in charge, while Kenyans are trained to take over.

Environmen­tal woes

The railway has also concerned environmen­talists, as it cuts through a key wildlife migration route. Ben Okita of Save The Elephants said that while underpasse­s have been built to allow elephants to cross, the creation of an embankment and fencing around the new railway was creating deadly confusion.

Previously one or two elephants were killed annually, but since 2016, 10 elephants have been hit on the old route. “They are used to crossing the old line and then they get to the new railway line and they find the fence and they get confused, in the process they are hit by a train,” said Okita. The next leg of the SGR, to connect Nairobi with the Rift Valley town of Naivasha at a cost of $1.5 billion has also caused a furore as it will cut through the capital’s iconic national park. The government is currently negotiatin­g the financing to link Naivasha to Kisumu near the Ugandan border, which Macharia says is expected to cost another $3.5 billion. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on March 16, 2016 shows a locomotive hauling cargo cars runs along an elevated section of the new Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) near Voi some 332 kms southeast of Nairobi.
This file photo taken on March 16, 2016 shows a locomotive hauling cargo cars runs along an elevated section of the new Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) near Voi some 332 kms southeast of Nairobi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait