The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim to open up airspace

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

THERE is need to expeditiou­sly revive Air Zimbabwe as part of Government’s ongoing efforts to overhaul the transport infrastruc­ture sector and liberalise airspace in line with the decision made by the African Union and Comesa, President Mnangagwa has said.

In his weekly column in The Sunday Mail, President Mnangagwa said there was need to liberalise airspace as part of a greater objective to modernise transport sector and turn Zimbabwe into an economic hub.

“On air transport, Zimbabwe must speedily liberalise its airspace in line with decisions of the AU and Comesa,” he said.

“This could run concurrent with our efforts of reviving Air Zimbabwe. The Chinese loan targeting the Robert Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport will restore our competitiv­eness in the air transport business.

“Already, our investment­s at Victoria Falls Airport have borne fruit. I am happy that work on the Beitbridge-Chirundu Highway is finally beginning. We must build our own capacity to lay modern transport infrastruc­ture. Above all, we must always bear in mind all these infrastruc­tures are ‘economies’ for which returns must follow.”

President Mnangagwa said the AU launched the Single African Air Transport Market early this year in its quest for a modest share in air freightage.

“It remains to be seen what this decision will do to air transport business on the continent,” he said.

“Zimbabwe is not doing too well on this front. The impact of all this low connectivi­ty of so-called landlocked developing countries on internatio­nal trade and trade facilitati­on is direct.”

President Mnangagwa said more work needed to be done on the rail network which was slowing down traffic and causing derailment­s.

“Current rail speeds of 30-50km per hour cannot make us an efficient economy, let alone a preferred transport hub for the region,” he said.

“Equally, NRZ workshops must be re-equipped so we are able to service the moving parts of the whole network.”

President Mnangagwa said this was the fundamenta­l question of harmonisin­g transit policies in the region.

“This is both a legal and infrastruc­tural issue,” he said.

“We must harmonise, simplify and standardis­e rules and documentat­ion as goods move between our borders.

“The creation of one-stop border posts goes a long way in that regard. This is why Beitbridge is being revamped, and why we have reached an agreement with South Africa to work as one on this border post — the busiest on the African continent. We need similar arrangemen­ts with all our neighbours if we are to become a real regional hub.”

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa
President Mnangagwa

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