BEIJING,
China
China, Tanzania and Zambia signed an initial agreement to rehabilitate a decades-old railway aimed at improving the rail-sea transportation in resource-rich East Africa, Chinese state media said on Wednesday.
President Xi Jinping witnessed
the signing of the memorandum of understanding on refurbishing the 1,860 kms
(1,156 mile) Tanzania-Zambia Railway Authority (TAZARA) railway with the
Tanzanian president, Samia Hassan and Zambian president, Hakainde Hichilema who were in Beijing attending the Forum on
China-Africa Cooperation, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.
The single-track TAZARA
railway was built between 1970 and 1975 through an interest-free loan from
China, offering a cargo transport route from Zambia's copper and cobalt mines
to the sea on Tanzania's coast that bypasses South Africa and the former state
of Rhodesia.
Commercial operations of the
line, derided by some Western governments at the time as the "bamboo
railway", began in 1976. The multi-year project had involved the
construction of two dozen tunnels and hundreds of bridges by tens of thousands
of Chinese and African workers.
Earlier this year, the World
Bank approved $270 million in financing to help improve connectivity between
neighbours Tanzania and Zambia and boost regional trade.
In February, China proposed to
spend $1 billion to rehabilitate the rail line through a public-private
partnership model.
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