By Anita Chepkoech and Joseph Kithama
In Summary
- Vitalis Leo, a retired captain who used to ship goods across Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania waters for 20 years, says it is by sheer luck or the long experience of a coxswain that a ship can leave one post and safely dock at its destination.
- The situation is a nightmare for transporters and commuters alike with a report showing that at least 5,000 fatalities are recorded on the lake annually.
- Now, many such tragedies could be avoided, as LVBC is set to put up 16 marine rescue and co-ordination centres, which will not only ensure maritime safety procedures are met but also improve response to distress calls.
With ancient navigation routes dating back to the 19th
century, missing course lights and clogged piers, sailing on Lake
Victoria has been reduced to a risky game of trial-and-error.
Lack of equipped weather stations also makes it difficult to predict weather patterns in order to take the precautions.
Vitalis Leo, a retired captain who used to ship goods across
Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania waters for 20 years, says it is by sheer luck
or the long experience of a coxswain that a ship can leave one post and
safely dock at its destination.
“Just like roads are marked for cars, navigation lights are
supposed to guide the captain on the right track. The maps or charts
show routes to use from one point to another,” said Mr Leo, who is now
the director of the Kisumu Maritime Centre.
“But without these aids, one is left to guess the passage and it
can be dangerous as accidents are likely to happen,” added the retired
captain adding that it was easy to get lost in the lake’s waters. With
time, he gained experience and mastered the routes.
The situation is a nightmare for transporters and commuters
alike with a report showing that at least 5,000 fatalities are recorded
on the lake annually.
The 2012 report by the Lake Victoria Basin Commission (LVBC), an
agency that manages lake developments for the East African Community,
said the deaths are caused by unstable boats, bad weather, overloading,
lack of safety equipment and poor seamanship. The stubborn weed,
hyacinth water, which has choked important waterways and landings, is
the latest cause of accidents.
In 1996, a Tanzanian passenger ship, MV Bukoba, capsized in Lake Victoria claiming the lives of over 700 people.
And just a week ago, a boat ferrying 14 musicians from Luhanda beach to Ndenda Island in Kenya capsized, killing nine of them.
The Kenya Maritime Authority rescue boat could not arrive at the
scene early enough to save the young artistes due to the long distance.
The matter was worsened by lack of life jackets in the ill fated boat.
Rescue centres
Now, many such tragedies could be avoided, as LVBC is set to put
up 16 marine rescue and co-ordination centres, which will not only
ensure maritime safety procedures are met but also improve response to
distress calls.
Rescue centres are stations strategically put up in the lake
that are equipped with rescue equipment including speed boats, a common
telephone code for co-ordination and trained personnel to ensure proper
management of information and quick response.
The stations will be manned by marine experts drawn from the riparian states.
Mwanza in Tanzania, the scene of the most fatal marine accident
to have occurred on Lake Victoria 20 years ago, will become the main
centre under a $3.8 million project. Other centres will be based in
Kisumu and Port Bell in Uganda. The setting up of the project is
expected to commence next year.
Lake Victoria Environmental Management Projects (LVEMP), an
implementation arm of LVBC, has secured $252 million in financial
support from the French government, the World Bank and other donors to
implement a number of projects, said regional project co-ordinator Dr
Raymond Mngodo.
Already, a common telephone code to be used by all the riparian
states to communicate to the centres has been gazetted to improve
co-ordination, the new LVBC executive secretary Dr Ali Matano said.
“A hotline number 110 has already been gazetted for the purpose.
Whenever there is distress, just dial the number and the nearest rescue
centre will be alerted,” said Dr Matano.
Dr Matano says the survey and mapping of the lake has already
been done. It involves drawing up new navigation routes and installation
of navigation aids like buoys and floodlights to mark the course to be
followed by cargo, tourist and passenger ships that are cruising from
one port to another.
This is being done according to the safety regulatory framework
under the EAC Lake Victoria Transport Act and Regulations, which was
approved by member states in 2010.
Safety projects
The commission last month, finalised the distribution of
navigational aids to major East African ports of Kisumu in Kenya, Port
bell in Uganda and Mwanza in Tanzania.
While handing over the project to the Kenyan government at the
Kisumu port, LVBC deputy executive secretary for programmes and projects
Eugene Muramira said the $3.8 million they received from the World Bank
was meant to undertake several safety projects including updating of
the maritime safety regulations, establishment of a search and rescue
organisation for the lake, communications, aids to navigation and
nautical charts and maps.
Some $1.5 million was used to carry out survey and mapping of
marine transport routes and installation of aids to navigation
facilities in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.
The Kenya Marine Contractor (KMC) embarked on the project in
April 2014 to design, supply, install and commission navigation aids to
the three countries.
A total of 86 navigation aids were installed, with Kenya
receiving 18 while Tanzania and Uganda which own a larger percentage of
lake surface receiving 46 and 22 respectively.
“Under the project, a total of 20 maritime officers were trained
to address issues affecting the lake, including oil spillage and
hazardous waste management. Two officers are Kenyan while the rest are
from the riparian states,” said Mr Muramira.
LVBC maritime safety officer Gerson Fumbuka said the navigation
aids would guide the captains on the right track, just like roads are
marked for cars.
“The significance of navigation aids is that they help the ship
captains to determine where they are and to enable them to cross each
other without colliding even in the rain. When a vessel is sailing from
Homa Bay to Kisumu in Kenya, for instance, the captain will bypass
special alerts and estimate the distance to the shore. If it is the
fourth beam, they know they are close to Nyapondi,” said Mr Fumbuka.
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