Business Day

Kazungula bridge set to ease border scrum at Beitbridge

- Mbongeni Mguni and Ray Ndlovu

Botswana and Zambia opened the $260m Kazungula bridge, which may help alleviate congestion at one of Africa’s busiest border crossings in neighbouri­ng Zimbabwe.

The 923m road and rail bridge offers a faster and cheaper alternativ­e to a route via Beitbridge on Zimbabwe’s border with SA. Kazungula has a one-stop border facility located near the quadripoin­t that links Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

Botswana President Mokgweetsi Masisi and Zambian President Edgar Lungu presided over the ceremony on Monday to mark the opening of Kazungula. Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) President Felix Tshisekedi, Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi and Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa also attended the ceremony.

Bottleneck­s at the Beitbridge crossing usually result in a snarl-up of commercial traffic and cargo on the route, which is also an important access point for the DRC. On average, about 25,000 people pass through Beitbridge daily, according to Zimbabwean officials.

Beitbridge — between SA and Zimbabwe — has for years been the busiest border post in the region. Zimbabwe’s internatio­nal trade ministry says about 600 trucks pass through that border each day. That is in addition to about 60 buses and 2,000 light vehicles.

Botswana and Zambia have agreed in principle to incorporat­e Zimbabwe into the Kazungula bridge spanning the Zambezi River, and the one-stop border post linking the two countries.

ZIMBABWE WILL BE PART OF THIS HALLMARK PROJECT, WHICH ACCELERATE­S OUR REGIONAL INTEGRATIO­N EFFORTS

Initially, the late former Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe was against the bridge constructi­on because Botswana and Zambia do not share a land border. The sentiment was the same during the colonial era when Rhodesia and SA, which administer­ed South West Africa (Namibia), declared the route illegal.

During constructi­on the bridge was reportedly designed to curve away from Zimbabwe, so as not to encroach on its territory. It creates an alternativ­e “north-south corridor” ultimately connecting Cape Town in the south and Cairo in the north, bypassing Zimbabwe.

Speaking at the ceremony, Masisi said: “I am happy to note that the Republic of Zimbabwe and ourselves [Botswana] and Zambia have agreed in principle to be a partner in this project. Our officials are working, and they will work increasing­ly faster and harder, to complete the remaining works with Zimbabwe.”

In his address, Mnangagwa said: “In the fullness of time, Zimbabwe will be part of this hallmark project, which accelerate­s our regional integratio­n efforts.”

Zimbabwe intends to join in the bridge’s last phase and has offered to pay a third of the $259.3m project.

“We have agreed with our counterpar­ts, the government of Botswana, the government of Zambia, we are now part of the Kazungula bridge and subsequent­ly we are going to be paying our portion of the developmen­t of that bridge,” Zimbabwe foreign affairs minister Frederick Shava told journalist­s.

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