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Talks start over Sh273bn Lamu port

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Port of Mombasa. The expected date of arrival of a vessel suspected to be carrying Kenya military arms was still unknown by Monday. Photo/FILE

Port of Mombasa. The expected date of arrival of a vessel suspected to be carrying Kenya military arms was still unknown by Monday. Photo/FILE 

By GITHUA KIHARA and PPS
Posted  Monday, December 1  2008 at  21:41

Kenya and Qatar have opened talks that could lead to the building of a Sh273 billion port in Lamu.

News of the deal emerged after President Kibaki held successful talks with the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalif Al Thani, during the President’s three-day official tour to the Middle East country.

The Emir said Qatar was keen on the Lamu project as it intends to increase its international investments.

If developed, the port will be expected to handle imports for Ethiopia — a land locked country with a population of 80 million — and Southern Sudan with a population of 12 million.

Southern Sudan requires huge imports for its ongoing reconstruction after decades of civil war with the North. Lamu’s proximity to Addis Ababa would also necessitate the building of a railway link between the two towns.

Importers in Northern Kenyan towns like Garissa, Wajir, Mandera and Moyale would also use the port instead of Mombasa, which currently handles all imports including those for regional countries like Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Should it be successfully completed, the Lamu port would help decongest Mombasa port, which experts indicate cannot be developed further as it had reached its full potential.

Mombasa port has been on the spot recently due to pile-up of imported goods and delays in offloading cargo which have been blamed for raising the cost of doing business, especially for importers.

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Government directed the port to operate round-the-clock to ease congestion.

Priority project

President Kibaki has in the past said the Lamu port was a priority project.

Qatar and Kenya will also open negotiations that would lead to making funds available for the construction of the Garsen-Lamu Road.

Kenya has also offered Qatar a partnership in sovereign bond through which Kenya hopes to raise billions of shillings for infrastructure development.

On the other hand, Qatar is seeking to lease 100,000 acres of farmland for horticulture at the Coast. This is the equivalent of 20km by 20km of land.

A study on the viability of a port in Lamu has been going on, a lead advisor to the inter-ministerial committee on the second transport corridor, Dr Mutule Kilonzo, said recently.

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Add a comment (2 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by YoungTurk

    If we are going to act as a port of entry and exit for the greater Eastern Africa the more the reason why we need an unwavering political stability. Just imagine if a repeat of the instability and uprooting of the railway line occurs again to due to a political standoff!! The ripple effect will affect millions of lives. Over to you legislators give us a new constutution and institutions that work please before the port and the whole infrastructure is in place.

    Posted  December 02, 2008 04:40 AM  
  2. Submitted by muthinja1

    Lini? Ama ni domo domo tu? We hear this things and wait forever, they never materialise, ni kama zile hadithi za mafuta, 'Stories of Giants' in vernacular, he he he!

    Posted  December 01, 2008 11:13 PM