Tanzania signs Sh215 billion railway contract with Turkish firm
News
By
Reuters
| Dec 29, 2021
President Samia Suluhu Hassan. [Courtesy]
Tanzania yesterday signed a contract with Turkish firm Yapi Merkezi to build a 368 kilometre (km) section of standard gauge railway that is expected to cost $1.9 billion (about Sh214.7 billion) and will be funded by loans.
It is part of a 1,219 km line which Tanzania is building to help boost trade with neighbouring countries and Yapi Merkezi is already building two other sections which are near completion.
The section announced yesterday will link Makutopora with Tabora, two towns in the country's central region, Masanja Kadogosa, Director General of Tanzania Railway Corporation (TRC), said in a televised ceremony.
The full line will connect Tanzania's Indian Ocean port and commercial capital of Dar es Salaam with Mwanza, a port city on the shores of Lake Victoria which straddles the borders of Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya.
READ MORE
France says G7 finance talks 'frank, sometimes difficult'
Africa banks on continental trade agreement to rev up investments
How 300 containers were stolen from Mombasa port
800 youth benefit from 'Glam on Wheels' Initiative
Flower industry loses Sh200m as transport strike hits JKIA cargo
Families feel the pinch as war-hit diaspora remittances shrink
Legal battle brews over new tea levy, directorship
For Africa to move forward, Africans must be allowed to cross borders
Global housing crisis deepens despite policy gains - UN warns
President Samia Suluhu Hassan said at the ceremony that Tanzania would borrow to finance the project.
"We will find friendly loan facilities and the best ways to get loans. We won't get this money from levies or domestic taxes," she said, adding they were giving priority to the project because it connects Tanzania to its regional neighbours.
The east African country is currently implementing mega infrastructure projects to support its industrialisation plans including a controversial 2,115 megawatt hydroelectric dam being built in a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) world heritage site.
Some of the mega projects were started by the late John Magufuli.