Uganda signs rail building deal with Turkey's Yapi Merkezi
                                                    Uganda's Standard Gauge Railway project coordinator, Perez Wamburu, said the agreement was for the first section of a planned 1,700 km electric rail line.
Uganda's government and Turkish construction firm Yapi Merkezi signed a contract to build a 272-kilometre (169-mile) section of railway, in a bid to boost regional trade, a Ugandan official said on Monday.
Uganda's Standard Gauge Railway project coordinator, Perez Wamburu, said the agreement was for the first section of a planned 1,700 km electric rail line, and the segment would cost Sh444 billion (2.7 billion euros or $3 billion).
More To Read
- New discovery reveals chimpanzees in Uganda use flying insects to tend their wounds
 - Kenya, Uganda launch joint tourism drive to attract 1.4 million African visitors
 - South Sudan, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Uganda seal deal on Horn of Africa transport corridor
 - Rights groups condemn silence from Ruto, Museveni as abducted Kenyan activists suffer in Uganda
 - Africa imports over 70 per cent of its medicines — Local production of ingredients could change that
 - Activists chain themselves outside Foreign Affairs Ministry over disappearance of Njagi, Oyoo
 
Its construction will start in November, Wamburu said.
The project will increase trade and reduce transport costs, Uganda's Works Ministry permanent secretary, Bageya Waiswa, said at the signing ceremony.
He said Uganda will use its own funds and credit from export credit organisations to finance the project, which will take 48 months to complete once started.
The rail section will run from the capital Kampala to Malaba at the border with Kenya, connecting landlocked Uganda to its neighbour's rail network and onto the Indian Ocean seaport of Mombasa.
Uganda had entered into an agreement in 2015 with the China Harbour and Engineering Company Ltd, (CHEC) to implement the project on the condition the firm helped secure funds for the railway from the Chinese government.
After years of fruitless talks, Uganda last year terminated the agreement and entered talks with Yapi Merkezi, which is carrying out a similar project in neighbouring Tanzania.
($1 = 0.9146 euros)
Other Topics To Read
                            
Top Stories Today