MASERU, Botswana
The opening of a bridge at Zambia’s Kazungula on Monday, 10 May, should have a significant impact on South Africa, relieving congestion at the infamous Beitbridge border crossing for freight truckers.
Currently, truckers moving goods from South Africa to Lusaka must travel via Zimbabwe, crossing the notoriously congested Beitbridge at the border between Limpopo and its Northern neighbour.
But with the new bridge at
Kazungula, South Africans can travel via Botswana, bypassing the Beitbridge
crossing – and Zimbabwe – altogether.
The bridge has been five years in the making, and the Botswana
department of transport and communications announced that it will be open for
business as of Monday.
The Kazungula Bridge Project (KBP) is a multi-national project on the North-South Corridor (NSC) within the SADC region and part of a corridor-long infrastructure improvement programme.
The project scope includes a bridge linking Botswana and Zambia over the Zambezi River to replace the existing ferry and juxtaposed one-stop border facilities at Kazungula.
For freight truckers making their way from South Africa to
Zambia, ferrying goods from the Port of Durban upwards through southern Africa
to reach regional markets to the North, the trip is a roughly 27 hour journey,
whether via Zimbabwe or Botswana.
But delays at Beitbridge could add on several hours depending on
the severity of the congestion, or the time of year.
The five-year project cost approximately $269.3
million, according to one of the funders, the African Development Bank Group.
About 250 trucks a day are expected to pass through the bridge, once it is
operational.
Spanning the Zambezi river, the bridge straddles the North-South
trade route, which runs from the Democratic Republic of Congo to the port of
Durban. It will also offer relief to traders, many of whom have had to use
unreliable ferries across the river to reach markets on either side of the
Botswana-Zambia border.
However, there have been concerns about Zimbabwe losing out on the DRC to Durban traffic, Africa Intelligence reported.
While fewer people crossed the Beitbridge border at the end of
2020, truckers and buses queued for days at a time.
At a briefing in December, Home Affairs Minister Aaron
Motsoaledi said over 100,000 travelers had crossed Beitbridge that month. But this was low compared to the
nearly 370,000 travelers who had crossed the previous year. The reduction in
traffic was partly due to Covid-19 travel restrictions on either side of the
border, as well as in Botswana.
Following an oversight visit to the Beitbridge and Lebombo ports
of entry in January, the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs noted a marked
decrease in the number of people crossing the borders, congestion remained
severe.
Congestion was made worse due to Covid-19 testing at the border. Five people reportedly died while waiting to cross the Beitbridge crossing.
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