The Borneo Post

Drivers stuck for days on east DR Congo’s nightmare roads

- Glody Murhabazi and Ricky Ombeni

KAMANYOLA, DR Congo: Travelling through the DR Congo’s volatile east takes days, with ramshackle roads and bridges, bandits and militia making journeys a nightmare.

Unlike well-kept Rwandan roads, the road between Bukavu and Uvira, the two main cities of the eastern South Kivu province, is pockmarked with potholes and craters.

Burundi closed its border with Rwanda in January, cutting off the safest and most efficient roads for transporti­ng goods into the Democratic Republic of Congo.

“All the roads are impossible to travel, we are used to suffering,” said Albert Muganguzi, one of many lorry drivers stranded for days on the 100-kilometre (62mile) stretch bordering Rwanda and Burundi.

Muganguzi had been stuck in the mud for three days after trying to cross the Shange River, where a dilapidate­d bridge had washed away.

Many bridges in the east of Congo cannot withstand the passage of heavy vehicles or the force of overflowin­g water from torrential rains. At the wheel of his Howo truck ferrying tonnes of fish and food from Uvira, Nathanael Kanune was also stuck in a queue of a dozen vehicles.

“The goods are going to rot, they will not last long,” Kanune warned.

While goods are stopped at the edge of the river on their way to Burundi’s economic capital Bujumbura, vehicles queue up on the opposite side of the bank.

“Take it easy. Get in line, or you are all going to fall down,” an official shouted to the disembarki­ng passengers as they hurried across a makeshift wooden footbridge.

Makeshift passages

Passengers are forced to travel through makeshift passages after Burundi closed its border with Rwanda on Jan 11, accusing it of supporting the rebel group RED-Tabara, which launched a deadly attack near the border with the DRC in late December.

Since then, there have been no direct Rwandan and Burundian routes from Bujumbura to Bukavu.

“I prefer to go through Rwanda, because the road is good and safe,” Sammy Bisimwa told AFP at a travel agency in Bukavu.

The Rwandan route avoids a section of the Congolese road which passes through the socalled ‘Ngomo escarpment,’ some 40 kilometres of track winding through mountains.

Going through Rwanda “reduces the suffering a bit,” Bisimwa added.

“The road through the Ruzizi plains is dilapidate­d, but there is also a lack of security, with robberies, assaults and kidnapping­s,” he said.

Anselme Kangeta, who lives in Bukavu, says the Rwandan side is better in terms of bribes passengers have to pay merely to travel.

While Rwanda has ‘just a small immigratio­n checkpoint’ the Ngomo section in DRC has “many barricades manned by security services, just to hassle people,” Kangeta said.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Public transport vehicles between Bukavu and Bujumbura in Burundi stuck on the road after the collapse of the bridge on national road number 5, in the village of Sange, South Kivu province, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
— AFP photos Public transport vehicles between Bukavu and Bujumbura in Burundi stuck on the road after the collapse of the bridge on national road number 5, in the village of Sange, South Kivu province, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.
 ?? ?? A truck stuck in the Shange river.
A truck stuck in the Shange river.

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