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Saturday, November 30, 2013

Somalis struggle after devastating cyclone: Aid agencies



MOGADISHU: More than 100,000 people are struggling in Somalia's cyclone-hit northeastern Puntland region, aid agencies warned Friday, saying floodwaters had wiped out the livestock two-thirds of the people survive on.

A joint statement by 12 agencies -- including Somali organisations as well as international ones such as CARE International, Oxfam, Save the Children, Refugees International and World Vision -- said that people are "in dire need of food, clean drinking water and shelter".

"For the pastoralist communities, the loss of their livestock could lead to an even greater number of people dying," said Degan Ali, from Somali agency Adeso. "Livestock is the basis of the local economy and their only means of survival."

The local government in the semi-autonomous region has said that as many as 300 people were feared to have been killed in the aftermath of the storm, but United Nations estimates later said that 80 were so far confirmed dead.

Aid agencies, the United Nations and local authorities are supplying food and medical supplies, but the recovery of communities struggling after decades of unrest -- and still recovering from extreme drought last year -- will take considerable time, the agencies cautioned.

"Families have lost their homes and possessions as floods damaged entire villages, roads and fishing boats," the statement read, also warning of the risk of waterborne diseases.

Infamous pirate hotspots such as the port of Eyl -- from where Somali gunmen have launched attacks far out into the Indian Ocean -- are some of the worst affected places.

Somalia has been riven by civil war since the collapse of the central government in 1991.

Impoverished Puntland, which forms the tip of the Horn of Africa, has its own government, but unlike neighbouring Somaliland, it has not declared independence from Somalia.

Source: dailystar.com

Somalia: Puntland Media Bias News About Taleex Attack - VP Returns to Taleh, Govt Cancels Unauthorized Conference


Garowe — The Vice President of Puntland Government in northern Somalia Gen. Abdisamad Ali Shire Thursday returned to Sool regional district of Taleh as the Government cancelled a proposed 'Khaatumo conference 3', Garowe Online reports.
Gen. Shire who recently arrived in the capital Garowe following the conclusion of reconciliation conference in Taleh was cordially welcomed to his hometown.
Independent sources tell Garowe Online that the presence of militias loyal to Mohamed Yusuf Jama Indho-Sheel, leader of the self-declared Khaatumo State in Taleh and attack on Tukaraq custom-duty prompted the Vice President's sudden return.
Gunmen are said to have opened fire on a motorcade carrying Gen. Shire's delegation including former parliamentarians, ministers and traditional elders with witnesses reporting several casualties.
The situation returned to normalcy and the Vice President is currently holding discussions with the community leaders, politicians and traditional elders according to Puntland Government officials.
Unauthorized conference cancelled
The proposed 'Khaatumo Conference 3' has been cancelled by Puntland Government as dissimilar views on the future of Khaatumo loom.
Gen. Abdisamad Ali Shire, himself who hails from the region declared: "There will be no Khatumo Conference held in Taleh district, so please do not lie and disappoint the people. Taleh is part of Puntland State," while he was speaking at a press conference in Taleh earlier this month.
Continuing, he stressed the need for Puntland unity urging the public to work together in spirit of brotherhood.
The elders and politicians of Dhulbahante clan that resides Sool region and Buhodle area disagreed over the conference in Taleh district, 90 km northwest of the capital Garowe after allegations against Khaatumo founders, mainly politicians from the Diaspora community surfaced.
Since 2002, Puntland and Somaliland in northern Somalia have engaged in sporadic clashes over control of parts of Sool and Sanaag regions, with Somaliland forces militarily seizing Las Anod - capital of Sool region - on October 15, 2007.
The incumbent Puntland President Abdirahman Mohamed Farole and Vice President Abdisamad Ali Shire are running for second term in office, against a number of presidential contenders.

War Degdeg ah: Abwaan Lagu Dilay Taleex


Taleex (Somaliland) - Wararka ka imanaya degmada Taleex oo ka tirsan gobolka Sool ayaa xaqiijiyay in maleeshiyada maamulka Majeerteen oo weerar ku soo qaaday degmada Taleex 28/11//2013 ay qudha ka jareen Abwaan caan ka ah gobolka Sool, Abwaanka ayaa ka mid ahaa dadkii rayidka ahaa ee ay ciidamada Faroole ku laayeen gudaha magaalada Taleex Eebe dhamaantood ha u naxariistee.



Somaliland Human Rights Defenders

Delivered by the Netherlands into the clutches of a suicide bomber in Somalia

“I cannot explain how I felt leaving the airport, it was like a nightmare. I was thinking, 'how can I survive'? I was scared about my life, and the danger there in Mogadishu. I would not wish this on anybody.”  Ahmed Said, 26-year-old who was deported from the Netherlands to Somalia
“Western states have been too quick to claim that the situation in Mogadishu has improved. They must review their change in policy and recognize the reality that Mogadishu is still unsafe, and they are endangering people’s lives by sending them there” - Sarah Jackson, Deputy Regional Director at Amnesty International
Aftermath of a suicide attack on Mogadishu's Hotel Maka on 8 November, claimed by Islamist armed group al-Shabab.© Mohamed -Abdiwahab/AFP/Getty Images
Before being sent to Mogadishu, Ahmed Said had never seen a corpse before.

His family fled southern Somalia when he was just a child. More than two decades later, the 26-year-old was deported from the Netherlands to Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, on 5 November. 

He told Amnesty International: “I cannot explain how I felt leaving the airport, it was like a nightmare. I was thinking, 'how can I survive'? I was scared about my life, and the danger there in Mogadishu.”

Just three days after his arrival, on 8 November, his fears about being sent to this dangerous place – a city he says he had never seen before – became a reality. Ahmed was walking down the road near the capital’s Hotel Maka when he heard an explosion. The blast – a suicide attack – killed at least six people and injured Ahmed and numerous others. 

“Everything was flying in my eyes,” Ahmed said, and explained how windows shattered in the explosion. He said he injured his hand and foot.  

The attack was claimed by al-Shabab, an al-Qa’ida-aligned Islamist armed group which was responsible for the horrifying attack that took place on 21-24 September in Kenya’s Westgate shopping mall which killed 67 people. 

Forcible returns

In December 2012, the Dutch government was the first of a number of Western states to announce they would resume returns of failed asylum seekers to Mogadishu, citing improved security as the key reason. Amnesty International understands that there is an agreement between the Dutch and Somali authorities that allows for two deportations per month. 

Ahmed was the second person to be deported from the Netherlands to Mogadishu under this arrangement. His experience speaks to the very real dangers of Mogadishu, where hand-grenade attacks, explosions and killings take place daily. 

Still not safe 

Despite some improvements in Mogadishu’s security in recent years, the situation remains fragile and volatile. Indeed, the security situation has again deteriorated throughout 2013. Although the capital is largely under government control, an armed conflict still continues between the Somali National Armed Forces and al-Shabab. Civilians are at risk of grave human rights abuses, including indiscriminate and targeted violence, rape, killings, as well as extortion. 

“Ahmed’s situation is a stark reminder that Mogadishu is not yet safe, and Western states are putting people’s lives are at risk by returning them there. Sadly, even the European Court of Human Rights has ruled that Mogadishu is now safe enough to warrant returns – this is simply untenable and returning people risks sending them into a very volatile situation,” says Sarah Jackson, Deputy Regional Director at Amnesty International. 

In its September judgement on a forcible return case in Sweden, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the general level of violence in Mogadishu had decreased since 2011. While there have been some improvements in security, Amnesty International believes that it is far from safe enough to begin deporting people there.  

Ahmed says he is from Kismayo, a war-torn city in southern Somalia. He and his family fled the country more than 20 years ago and have not left Europe since he arrived. In effect, he is a foreigner in Somalia. His return to Somalia by the Dutch authorities is tantamount to abandoning a foreigner in a highly dangerous city to fend for himself. 

People with few connections in Mogadishu are at a heightened risk of living in one of Somalia’s internally displaced people’s camps. The camp conditions are dire, and their residents are extremely vulnerable to ill-treatment and human rights abuses. Security is not Ahmed’s only concern. Without access to clean water he will likely experience ongoing ill-health, something with which he is already battling. 

“Western states have been too quick to claim that the situation in Mogadishu has improved. They must review their change in policy and recognize the reality that Mogadishu is still unsafe, and they are endangering people’s lives by sending them there,” says Sarah Jackson.  

Ahmed is just one person affected by such policy changes. If they remain in place, many more people will be uprooted and their lives put at risk. 

“I would not wish this on anybody,” Ahmed says, reflecting on his terrifying ordeal. 

Source: amnesty.org

UK: Don't make khat a class-C drug, MPs urge government

The government should reverse its decision to ban the herb khat because it "has not been taken on the basis of evidence or consultation", MPs say.
Khat is used widely in Africa, but is becoming more popular in Europe
Home Secretary Theresa May wants to re-grade the plant, a stimulant popular among Yemeni and Somali communities, as a class-C drug.
But the Home Affairs Committee say this is contrary to scientific advice that it causes no social or medical harm.
The UK could become a khat-trafficking hub if it is not banned, ministers say.
The home secretary announced in July that the plant would be controlled under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
This came after the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs concluded in January that it should not be banned, as there was "insufficient evidence" it caused health problems.
'Potential friction'
The government's Frank drugs advice website warns that khat, which is said to give users a feeling of alertness and happiness, can also cause insomnia, high blood pressure and constipation and suppress the appetite.
But the Home Affairs Committee's chairman, Labour MP Keith Vaz criticised the government's stance, saying: "It is extremely worrying that such an important decision has not been taken on the basis of evidence or consultation.
"The expert Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs conducted a thorough review of the evidence and concluded that no social or medical harm resulted from the use of khat. We support the advisory council's findings."
Mr Vaz said the best solution would be to introduce a licensing system for importers as a "middle way" between unregulated trade and an outright ban.
He added: "The UK should not become a hub for the distribution of illegal khat. It is wrong to place legal importers in the impossible position of choosing between a life of potential hardship or one of crime.
"It is baffling that potential friction, between already disadvantaged communities and the police, has not been fully considered."
Mr Vaz also warned that a ban in the UK could result in an increase in membership of the Somali militant group al-Shabab among young men previously employed in the khat trade.
About 2,560 tonnes of khat, worth £13.8m, was imported to the UK in 2011-12.
It is already banned in most of Europe and in a number of other countries, including the US and Canada.
Mrs May announced her decision to ban it in July, saying that, otherwise, the UK risked "becoming a single, regional hub for the illegal onward trafficking".
People caught in possession of a class-C drug can be sentenced to up to two years in prison and face an unlimited fine. Dealing or supplying can mean up to 14 years in jail.
Source: bbc.co.uk

Friday, November 29, 2013

SOMALIA : Cancer claims Toronto woman after delayed diagnosis by Trillium Health


A 28-year-old Toronto woman has died less than four months after learning that she had cancer— and that her diagnosis and treatment had been delayed because of an alleged hospital error.
Houda Rafle passed away early Wednesday, just as she was starting legal action against TrilliumHealth Partners and a radiologist after he misread her CT scan and failed to see a tumour sitting above her heart, she says in a statement of claim filed in court on Nov. 12.
Rafle was scheduled to do an interview with the Star the following day. But the young television producer’s health took a turn for the worse and she ended up in hospital, where she remained until she died.
“There are no words to describe the horrible impact the events giving rise to this action have had on my life and the lives of my family,” she wrote in a press release she had prepared with her lawyer.
“But I am not doing this because I am angry or because I want to lay blame. The truth is I am concerned for many others whose lives can be destroyed if nothing changes.”
The hospital declined to say Wednesday whether it had filed a statement of defence.
“We are deeply saddened by this news. On behalf of the hospital, our thoughts are with the family at this very difficult time,” said hospital spokesperson Carol Kotacka.
On March 5, Rafle went to Trillium complaining of shortness of breath, nausea and vomiting. A CT scan of her heart revealed a 1.6 cm. mass, but radiologist Dr. Ivo “Ivan” Slezic Dr. Ivo “Ivan” Slezic failed to notice it, says her statement of claim.
It wasn’t until she returned to the hospital five months later, complaining of a persistent cough, that the mass was detected on a new CT. But by this time it had grown to 2.5 cm. and spread to her lungs. Rifle was diagnosed with stage IV angiosarcoma, which also eventually spread to her brain.
Trillium had restricted Slezic’s hospital privileges in the meantime.
The hospital subsequently brought in outside experts to review 3,500 CT scans and mammograms, which were originally read by Slezic. That process is ongoing, Kotacka said.
Rafle died at 2:11 a.m. Wednesday in the intensive care unit Toronto General Hospitalsurrounded by her six siblings. They are inconsolable.
“She was in my oldest brother’s arms for her last breath and she had a smile on her face. She looked absolutely beautiful. She was very, very peaceful,” her sister Deeqa, 23, said through tears.
They family believes Rafle would still be alive today if she had been diagnosed earlier.
“It’s absolutely unfair . . . misdiagnosis, 28, healthy before that, my role model, my best friend my big sister. It’s a lot,” Deeqa cried.
Rafle’s story has touched many, including Health Minister Deb Matthews. She took the unusual step of a making a personal phone call to the young woman after seeing her in the media.
“It’s not something I usually do. In her case, I saw her do an interview . . . I thought her spirit was beautiful and I wanted to reach out to her so I did,” Matthews said.
“It’s so sad, just so sad . . . My heart just broke for her,” the minister continued.
Matthews said she expects to soon make an announcement on improving quality assurance in radiology across the province.
Lawyer Duncan Embury said his client, Rafle, launched a negligence lawsuit because she wanted changes in a health system in which she and other Ontarians put their faith.
“She lost her life a as result of failure of the medical system,” he said. “It’s about accountability in our system. When it comes to disease processes like this, time matters.”
Rafle’s statement of claim alleges the hospital was negligent in not alerting to her to potential problems with her scan immediately after restricting Slezic’s privileges in April.
It also claims that Slezic should not have been practicing medicine because “his abilities were impaired by fatigue, medical conditions or other factors.”
Slezic had just returned to work after undergoing chemotherapy for cancer.
Deeqa said the family is too distraught at this point to even think about whether they will continue the lawsuit on Houda’s behalf.
But Rafle’s own words, penned on her press release, advise other patients to advocate strongly for themselves in the health system:
“Anyone who has any troubling symptoms should understand that they need to question the doctors and get second opinions to seek accurate test results. A proper diagnosis and timely medical care is absolutely critical if you have cancer. Early diagnosis can save your life.”
Source:http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2013/11/28/cancer_claims_toronto_womal

Talks Between Somalia and Somaliland postponed until the first week of Jan. 2014- FM


Somaliland Foreign Minister
HARGEISA - The Talks between Somaliland and Somalia has been postponed for the second time running following request made by Somali government. Turkish ambassador to Somalia previously announced that the talks were delayed and might have resumed in the first week of Dec.

Somaliland Foreign Minister who is on trip to Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital spkeaking to BBC Somali services confirmed the postponement of the dialogue.

Mr. Mohamed Biihi Yoonis said that the appeal made by Somali goverment which is facing political crisis and until this standoff is resolved, the talks can not resume.
Somaliland FM has announced during the interveiw that the talks were postponed until the January 2014.

Somaliland FM Mr. Mohamed Biihi Yonis has added that the Turkish government is about to open Consular office in Hargeisa soon.

He stated that the diplomatic offices that both countries will open came follwing the visit embarked by delegation headed by Somaliland president H.E. Ahmed Mohamed Mohamoud Silanyo.

Mr. Biihi added that they talked with PrimeMinister Ergodan to open consular office in Ankara and that the Turkish government should follow siut in order to exchange diplomatic ties and open office in Hargeisa and he said that they accepted their appeal.

Egypt's transitional government prepares for battle over Ethiopia`s giant dam on the Nile


The continuing political turmoil in Egypt has had an impact on every aspect of the country’s life and one of those is foreign relations, as Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy readily admits. Most of this externalised turbulence, if you like, has been felt in the Middle East where Egypt’s alliances have oscillated as wildly as its own changes of government over the last two and a half years.
The biggest impacts have been on Egypt’s relations with Turkey and Qatar which were the regional states that most strongly supported former President Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood and were therefore the states most angered when he was toppled on 3 July 2013. Egypt has just expelled the Turkish ambassador and Ankara quickly followed suit.
Fahmy told visiting South African journalists this week he had no choice after persistent and very negative criticism from Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan about the 3 July ‘coup’ (which the current Egyptian transitional government calls the 30 June revolution, dating it rather by the day Egyptians massed again on Tahrir Square to demand that Morsi step down).
The Qatar ambassador will probably be next to pack his bags, Egyptian officials say. But of course in the highly polarised Middle East environment of the Arab Spring – if that expression still means anything – the toppling of Morsi was wildly popular with other anti-Islamist governments, notably the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
So, while Egypt had to quickly repay a US$ 4 billion loan to Qatar, this loss has been more than compensated for by credit from its new allies, such that Trade and Industry Minister Mounir Fakhry Abdel Nour is able to say the country doesn’t need the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The events of 30 June to 3 July have also reverberated southwards across Africa, although not nearly to the same degree. They have certainly hurt Egypt’s relations with South Africa which have never been very warm but have chilled by several degrees in the past four months. Pretoria also criticised the removal of Morsi as a coup and was even more critical of the violence and hundreds of deaths when Egyptian security forces removed Muslim Brotherhood protestors from the streets of Cairo in August. The Egyptian authorities reacted angrily with some sharp remarks comparing the handling of the Brotherhood demonstration with South Africa’s Marikana disaster and so on. It got down to that level.
Although the African Union also condemned the ouster of Morsi as a coup and suspended Egypt from membership under its rules against unconstitutional changes of government, no other individual African state seems to have been as critical as South Africa was.
But the impact of the turmoil in Egypt has been felt in other, more subtle ways, as foreign ministry spokesperson Badr Abelatty explained this week when he suggested that Ethiopia had taken advantage of Egypt’s distraction by internal events to charge ahead with building its US$ 4,7 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) on the Blue Nile just 20 kms from its border with Sudan. He said the planned height of the dam wall had soared by about 35 metres while Egypt was distracted by internal turmoil.
The international panel of ten experts appointed by Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia, which has been assessing the likely impact of the dam for some time, had reported that it was unable to assess the impact of raising the dam wall so high, Abelatty said. The panel said it required more studies and statistics from Ethiopia before it could assess the economic, environmental and safety impact of such a huge dam. Abelatty said that many experts question the location of the dam – in an area where a lot of earthquakes have occurred. If such a large dam were to burst ‘Sudan would be finished and the flood would destroy at least upper Egypt’ he claimed.
He points out that Egypt relies on the Nile for 95% of its water while the upstream Nile Basin countries depend on it for only 2% to 5% of their water needs. Egypt acknowledges that Ethiopia, in particular, has other needs, such as energy and development, which the dam is intended to serve, ‘but not if they harm our interests. According to international law, the Nile is a resource for all’. All countries involved must seek a ‘win-win’ solution, Abelatty says, noting that the panel of experts is scheduled to meet again on 3 December for its next discussion.
This represents a softening of approach from the bellicose stance the Morsi administration inadvertently revealed. On 4 June Egyptian politicians from across the political spectrum met to discuss what to do about the dam. There appeared to be wide consensus that Egypt should use force, if necessary, to stop construction, either by bombing the dam with aircraft or helping Ethiopian anti-government rebels to sabotage it. The meeting was accidentally broadcast live, causing huge embarrassment to Egypt.
The new ‘win-win’ talk will help it regain some sympathy from Africa where Egypt has lost much of its traditional influence while trying to manage its own turmoil. Fahmy insists that his transitional government is now determined to re-nurture its ‘African roots’ and says that he has put the emphasis on Africa rather than the West, in his first foreign visits since taking office in July, travelling to Uganda, Burundi, Senegal and Sudan. Abelatty elaborates on a new Partnership for Development with Africa which Cairo is developing which will increase Egypt’s development aid to the continent.
He pointedly notes that Fahmy has also visited Senegal since taking office, to demonstrate that Egypt is not just obsessed about the Nile. Nonetheless the Nile is undoubtedly front and centre of Egypt’s Africa policy right now and is likely to remain so for a while to come. Maybe Egyptian jets won’t bust the dam but Egyptian politicians and diplomats are certainly going to bust a gut trying to ensure by every other means, that it doesn’t go ahead, or at least not according to the present blueprint.
Peter Fabricius, Foreign Editor, Independent Newspapers, South Africa
Source: issafrica.org

Somalia’s Failure: A Broken System or Lousy Leaders?

Somalia's power-sharing system has failed.
(Albany Associates / Flickr)
In most of the world’s parliamentary democracies, it’s rare to see presidents and prime ministers bickering, since their roles and responsibilities are more or less distinct and rarely overlap. However, in many African governments, power struggles between presidents and prime ministers are quite common, even when the offices have clearly defined constitutional roles.
In Somalia, the president is the head of state. His powers include appointing a prime minister and serving as commander-in-chief of the armed forces, which includes the power to declare of a state of emergency or war. The prime minister is the chief of the cabinet, guiding and overseeing the work of the other ministers. However, despite these neatly separated roles and responsibilities, Somalia is once again having great difficulty in governing itself under a power sharing system.
Although it’s designed to encourage collaboration between clans, the arrangement has yet to produce sustainable political stability, with a rift widening between President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon. The real issue between them is unclear, but according to media reports, the president recently asked the prime minister to resign due to incompetence, while the prime minister claims that the president has no constitutional power to request his resignation. The prime minister has complained that the government cannot achieve its goals because of the slim cabinet that the president had imposed on him, which has resulted in each minister being in charge of three to four ministries.
After its independence, Somalia had a parliamentary system based on political parties. But a coup d’Ă©tat in 1969 installed the Siad Barre military regime, disrupting the democratic process and eventually plunging the country into civil war. Since then, a number of power-sharing agreements aimed at resolving the crisis have crumbled.
In 2000, a Transitional National Government was established in Djibouti that ended up disintegrating due to a power struggle that began with President Abdiqasim Salad Hassan and Prime Minister Ali Khalif Galaydh. Similarly, in 2002, the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development organized a reconciliation conference in Kenya that gave birth to a Transitional Federal Government and a parliamentary system without any political party presence. The party system was replaced with a clan-based power-sharing formula called the 4.5 system, which awarded an equal share of parliamentary seats to Somalia’s four major clans, with a fifth retaining a half-share.
But something’s not working. Somalia’s three most recent presidents have each appointed three prime ministers, a rapid turnover rate indicating ongoing infighting between representatives of competing clans who are loathe to cede power to each other. As a result, Somalia has been plagued by a political process that is based on competition rather than cooperation and compromise. The current fallout between the president and the prime minister is a continuation of the political stalemate that has hampered Somalia’s progress for decades.
Meanwhile, precious time is being wasted on political brinkmanship rather than dealing with the innumerable challenges facing the country. Security, reconciliation, the economy, education, infrastructure, and healthcare are a few of the many issues that do not get addressed so long as the president and prime minister are locked in a power struggle. Consequently, many Somalis have lost faith in their leaders’ ability to unite the nation, which may lead the country towards another civil war and away from economic prosperity.
Therefore, the time has come for Somalia to try a different system of governance. Somali constitutional experts should review and amend the constitution from a power sharing system back to political party system in which a president and vice president from the same party are elected on the same platform.
The clan-based system has had its chance. Only through a party system, overseen by an electoral commission, can Somalia put together a government with the capacity to solve the country’s unique challenges—and bring about the political stability that has eluded it for the last two decades.
Nafisa G. Santur is a political researcher and conflict analyst based in Nairobi.
Source: fpif.org

Kenya Launches Mega $13.8bn Railway Project


President tells launch ceremony that railway line linking port city to neighbouring nations is a "historic milestone".
The new line, to be built with funds from China, will replace a dilapidated colonial-era railway [AFP]
Kenya has launched a $13.8bn flagship railway project linking the port city of Mombasa to the capital Nairobi and is eventually hoped to extend onwards to neighbouring Uganda.

The project, called a "historic milestone" by President Uhuru Kenyatta, who presided over a ground-breaking in Mombasa on Thursday, will also connect with proposed lines to Rwanda and South Sudan, according to the AFP news agency.

Built by a Chinese state-owned firm and with funds from the Chinese government, the railway line is expected to dramatically increase trade and boost Kenya's position as a regional economic powerhouse.

Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi form the the East African Community, a regional bloc that the five nations have used to boost economic integration.

"What we are doing here today will most definitely transform... not only Kenya but the whole eastern African region," Kenyatta told crowds at the ceremony, which was attended by Chinese officials.

"As a result east Africa will become a competitive investment destination. A busy growing east Africa is good for us as a country."

The new railway line will replace the dilapidated British colonial-era railway, and has been hailed by the Kenyan media as the region's largest infrastructure project for a century.

"Kenya is stepping forward...it will be a landmark project both for Kenya and east Africa," said  Liu Guangyuan, China's ambassador to Kenya.

Cargo costs

Financing, currently only from China, has so far been made for only the first 450km section from Mombasa to Nairobi, replacing the current single trainline with a high-speed standard gauge track, as well as building an additional line alongside.
Work on that section, by the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC), is expected to be completed by 2017.

CRBC completed in August the first-stage of an expansion to Mombasa's port, including a berth able to handle 50,000 tonne container ships

According to plans, the new lines would see passenger journey times cut from the current 12 hours to around four, which is around half the current driving time on crowded and pot-holed roads.

Freight trains are planned to be able to cut the current 36-hour trip by rail to just eight, a major boost for regional landlocked nations, with planners claiming it will slash cargo transport costs by 60 percent.

Source: Al Jazeera