The Borneo Post

1,000 trucks stranded in Mali roads protest

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KATI, Mali: More than 1,000 trucks loaded with merchandis­e were blocked at the entrance to Mali’s capital Bamako on the fourth day of protests against the poor state of the country’s roads.

AFP reporters witnessed the line of trucks snaking about a dozen kilometres along the road that leads from the Kati toll station some 15km outside the capital to the country’s west, and beyond to Senegal and Mauritania.

The protests started on Aug 23 in the western city of Kayes when hundreds of residents blocked the main bridge over the Senegal River.

It has since spread to other regions, with protesters everywhere calling for urgent improvemen­t of Mali’s dilapidate­d roads and railways.

“I have been here for four days, we cannot enter Bamako,” a truck driver said in Kati, describing the demonstrat­ors’ ‘battle’ as ‘belonging to everyone’.

Moussa Coulibaly, from Dakar in neighbouri­ng Senegal, feared his truckload of fruit ‘will soon not be edible.’ Buses, too, have come to standstill.

Along the barricades, members of the pressure group Sirako insisted they would remain until they had a firm commitment that roads would be upgraded.

Prime Minister Boubou Cisse met representa­tives of the group on Monday but failed to convince them to lift the blockade. — AFP

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