Business Daily (Nairobi)

Kenya: Inland Nations Shying Away From Mombasa

Ben Sanga

22 April 2008


An assertion by the Uganda transport authority that it was intensifying talks with its Tanzanian counterpart to make increased and better use of the Southern corridor is a clear hint that Great Lakes countries are intensifying their search for an alternative to the Northern corridor.

Transport experts in the country are now pointing fingers at last year's post- election chaos, which led to big losses to transit businesses, as being behind the impetus for the chase of an alternative rout by the landlocked nations in the great lakes region.

The Uganda minister for finance, Ezra Suruma was quoted as saying that his government was keen than ever before to explore with the Tanzanian authorities the use of a southern transport corridor from Uganda to the Tanzanian port of Dar- es -Salaam.

The southern corridor involves the use of ferries on Lake Victoria between port Bell near Kampala and Mwanza on the Tanzanian end of the lake, and the railway from Mwanza to Dar- es- Salaam.

The use of the southern corridor at its current location according to experts, however, could be expensive than the Northern corridor , which joins the port of Mombasa.

However they warn that if the corridor is concluded as outlined in the Dar- es- Salaam declaration, the port of Mombasa would kiss goodbye business from some great lakes countries - Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia

And transport experts are saying that the Kenyan authority has been taking KPA's dominance for granted which has translated to harsh business conditions for transit business.

"Kenyan process of clearing transit cargo is becoming cumbersome day by day due to the increasing new conditions from KRA. The transport system, in particular rail transport, is in pathetic condition. Believe me, the Mombasa port is the most expensive port compared to other developing nation ports.

Tell me why these countries (landlocked East African nations) could look for an alternative to the Northern corridor." Observes Lisimbu Eliombo, a customer expert in the secretariat of the transit transport co-ordination authority of the Northerm corridor.

The northern corridor road runs from Mombasa to Malaba on the Uganda border and also serves Rwanda, Burundi, Congo, Uganda and southern Sudan.

The port of Mombasa has been dominating the transit business in the region, but landlocked nation have been raising alarm over poor infrastructure and the augmenting cost of conducting business with Kenya.

The move resulted for the a section of great lakes countries, in the year 2000, to moot an initiative of looking for an alternative rout to the northern corridor which could intertwine the region and came up with the southern corridor project-great lakes region railway.

The project would provide a railway system interconnecting lakes Tanganyika, Kivu, and Edward as well as an inter-linkage with the southern and eastern railway systems.

It also entails the construction of the rail lines linking the lakes, improving of the inland waterways, upgrading existing lake ports, providing efficient and appropriate water transport equipment on the lakes.

Read comments. Write your own.

Copyright © 2008 Business Daily. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com). To contact the copyright holder directly for corrections — or for permission to republish or make other authorized use of this material, click here.

AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 125 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.

Author: mitchhukki
Wed Apr 23 21:04:32 2008

MP people increased their salaries in kenya by 3000% (three thousand percent.... They resist to raise any other salary in order to ensure that no one else can ever compete against them as everyone else will be a pauper. If they are so selfish do they deserve any respect or should they all rot when they die?

Author: raymond
Thu Apr 24 14:52:12 2008

so whay didint they do iti before? why wait until now?its not easy doing bussines with tanzanians either, their port should have been an easy acces to the great ragion countries, but no they they made it harder from the begining, so why are they going to change now



Sign up for FREE daily 'top headlines' by email »


SELECT
SELECT

Most Active Stories: Kenya

Photos of President Obama in Ghana