Photo: Daily News
By Apolinari Tairo
The
Tanzanian government will soon launch the second phase of the
construction of the standard gauge railway (SGR) line to link the
commercial city of Dar es Salaam with the capital of Dodoma.
This was said by
Prof Makame Mbarawa, the minister for Works, Transport and
Communications after opening the Eighth East and Central Africa Roads
and Rail Infrastructure Summit in Dar es Salaam recently. The
construction will start next month.
The second phase stretches from Morogoro to Dodoma, a distance of 336 kilometres.
When completed,
Tanzania will introduce a fast and modern train with a speed of 160kph
while the freight train will have a top speed of 120kph.
"We expect to see
this railway line link Tanzania with other regional, landlocked states
including Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo, Zambia and Uganda through quick and
timely access from Tanzania's Indian Ocean ports," Prof Mbarawa told
the The EastAfrican on the sideline of the infrastructure summit.
But Tanzania is
still seeking financing for the $ 1.2 billion project whose first phase
President John Magufuli launched in April this year.
The president has approached the World Bank and the government of South Africa for support.
Dr Magufuli had
asked President Jacob Zuma to help Tanzania in lobbying for loans from
the BRICS-run New Development Bank which South Africa is a member. He
also requested the World Bank president, Dr Jim Yong Kim to help in
financing the project.
Both President Zuma and Mr Jim Yong visited Tanzania this year.
The SGR project is
being undertaken by Yapi Merkez Insaat Ve Sanayi of Turkey and
Mota-Engil, Engenharie and Construcao Africa, SA of Portugal.
Stretching 1,057km
from Dar es Salaam to the shores of Lake Victoria, the SGR will be
constructed on the same line with the Central Railway Line built by
Germans in 1905 from Dar es Salaam to Kigoma, then by the British
colonial government from Tabora to Mwanza (427km).
In its plans to
revive rail transport through the SGR, the government has tabled a Bill
before the parliament seeking to form the Tanzania Railway Corporation
(TRC) that will replace the Reli Assets Holding Company (Rahco) and
Tanzania Railway Ltd (TRL).
Prof. Mbarawa
tabled the Railways Bill 2017 last week and Members of Parliament
endorsed it paving the way for the establishment of TRC and dissolution
of Rahco and TRL.
The two companies were formed 20 years ago after the government privatised the TRC to form two independent firms.
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