What happened to JKIA's Greenfield Terminal?

Kenya itazidi kuwatoa povu wana fisi-em!

***bado tunangoja majibu kwa ule uzi wa 'fastijeti'. tafadhali wacha kupita pembezoni kimya kimya.
 
Kenya itazidi kuwatoa povu wana fisi-em!

***bado tunangoja majibu kwa ule uzi wa 'fastijeti'. tafadhali wacha kupita pembezoni kimya kimya.
That project was supposed to start 2013 n end in 2017.
 
Can someone give a concrete answer?
 
KQ loss making essentially made that project unrealistic.

This is why KAA resorted to the modular capacity building guided by the overall air traffic.
 
Bagamoyo started way back in 2011 and nothing to show for it in 2018. Thread closed indefinitely.
 
Bagamoyo started way back in 2011 and nothing to show for it in 2018. Thread closed indefinitely.
Ati Bagamoyo port started way back 2015? JPM suspended the project to do due dilligence vetting. Now he has rectified every clause that was to harm nation's interest the project will soon to proceede. Chinese Ambassador to Tanzania Wang Ke had this to say as a clarification!

China-Tanzania talks over Bagamoyo port project in progress: envoy
Source: Xinhua 2018-05-20 02:10:55

DAR ES SALAAM, May 19 (Xinhua) -- China said on Saturday good progress was being made on negotiations with the Tanzanian government on the 10 billion U.S. dollars Bagamoyo mega port and special economic zone, paving way for the long-delayed construction work to begin.

"Negotiations between the governments of China and Tanzania on the Bagamoyo port project are progressing well. This is a huge and important project in our bilateral cooperation," Chinese Ambassador to Tanzania Wang Ke told journalists in Dar es Salaam during a visit to the Ministry of Finance and Planning.

"Tanzanian and Chinese governments have consulted widely on this project. I hope that we will be able to reach agreement on relevant contracts so we can start this project as soon as possible to benefit the people of Tanzania," she added.

The initial framework agreement for the Bagamoyo port was signed way back in 2013, but progress has been slow in concluding a final agreement for the major investment undertaking.

The state-run China Merchants Holdings International (CMHI) and Oman's State General Reserve Fund (SGRF) are teaming up with the Tanzanian government to invest in what is expected to become one of the biggest ports in Africa.

The World Bank said in 2016 that inefficiencies at the Dar es Salaam port cost Tanzania and its neighbors up to 2.6 billion U.S. dollars a year.

Government officials said the envisaged Bagamoyo port would be able to handle mega-ships -- with a container vessel size of 8,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) -- after the first phase was completed, with room for expansion.

The whole project including roads, railways and the economic zone is expected to take 10 years to complete, but it was unclear in how many phases it will be carried out.

Former President Jakaya Kikwete officiated at a groundbreaking ceremony for the project in October 2015 in the final weeks and days of his presidency and vowed that construction of phase I of the project would be completed in three years.

But three years down the line, construction work is yet to start, amid suggestions that President John Magufuli's government has decided to shelve the project and instead focus on the expansion and modernization of the Dar es Salaam port.

China-Tanzania talks over Bagamoyo port project in progress: envoy - Xinhua | English.news.cn
 
Recent coverage on Bagamoyo port

Oman-China relations and Indian Ocean security



China's deepening involvement in the Indian Ocean has taken a decidedly military cast, but is only tangentially military in nature

home > analysis news 29.05.2018







By Dr. Fred H. Lawson

The writer is Visiting Professor of National Security Affairs at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.

CALIFORNIA

Oman tends to get overshadowed by more assertive member-states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), most notably Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Yet policy-makers in Beijing have cultivated close ties to Muscat, and have steadily broadened the scope of relations between the two countries. The People's Republic of China (PRC) started to import large quantities of oil from Oman during the late 1970s, and sharply increased its purchases during the 1990s. By 2013, two-thirds of Oman's total oil and gas exports went to the PRC, and the Chinese market has accounted for an even higher percentage of Omani foreign sales in recent years.

Yet hydrocarbons no longer constitute the most crucial component of Oman-PRC relations. When warships of the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) deployed to the Gulf of Aden at the end of 2008, as part of the multilateral campaign to suppress piracy in the northwestern corner of the Indian Ocean, the Omani port of Salalah became the expeditionary force's primary logistical facility. Salalah proved to be ideally situated as PLAN units carried out joint exercises in the fall of 2014, first with the Islamic Republic of Iran and then with Tanzania. Furthermore, the PLAN faced no competition for access to Salalah, unlike Djibouti, where France, Italy, Japan and the United States all built up a sizable military presence.

Prospects for closer collaboration between Oman and the PRC brightened during 2015-16. Saudi Arabia's intervention in the civil war in Yemen threatened to disrupt shipping in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, at the same time that Iran accorded India a greater role in the development of the port at Chahbahar. These developments posed a direct challenge to China's maritime trade, as well as its efforts to develop the Pakistani port of Gwadar. By refusing to join the Saudi-led offensive in Yemen, while facilitating Chinese operations at both Salalah and the northern Omani port of Suhar, the authorities in Muscat reassured Beijing that it could count on Oman as a partner in the effort to promote stability in the Indian Ocean region. This impression was confirmed when Oman became a founding member of the PRC-sponsored Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

Cooperation between Muscat and Beijing quickly focused on projects in East Africa, where Oman enjoys long-standing economic and cultural ties. Oman's sovereign wealth fund, the General State Reserve Fund, joined the PRC's China Merchants' Holding International in an ambitious scheme to upgrade the Tanzanian port of Bagamoyo. The harbor is expected to serve as the entry point to the booming interior markets of Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia and Rwanda -- which are linked to the coast by PRC-built railways. Oman then pledged USD 50 million to construct a network of fuel storage tanks in Tanzania, Kenya and Mozambique.

In May 2016, investors based in the PRC's heavily Muslim Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region agreed to finance a massive industrial zone at the Omani port of Duqm, situated midway between Muscat and Salalah. The project includes an oil refinery, a distribution center for construction materials, a methanol plant, a solar energy equipment factory, an automobile assembly factory and a cement plant, along with light manufacturing, a hospital and a tourist complex. The ambitious venture caught the eye of the Saudi government, which has added a fish processing plant and inland highway.

More important, Chinese activity at Duqm attracted the attention of India, whose Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid an official visit to Muscat in February 2018. Modi discussed a variety of security matters with Sultan Qabus bin Sa'id, and capped two days of talks by signing a bilateral Memorandum of Understanding that permits Indian warships to call at Duqm to take on supplies and make repairs.

Notable aspects of Chinese grand strategy can be seen in Beijing's partnership with Oman. The PRC's deepening involvement in the Indian Ocean has taken a decidedly military cast, but is only tangentially military in nature. PLAN operations promote such commonly accepted principles as ensuring the safety of maritime commerce and protecting civilians caught up in civil war. Furthermore, the Chinese government supports the expansion of infrastructure that can integrate the countries of the Arabian peninsula and East Africa more firmly into the global economy. Such policies show a predisposition to act in a comprehensive fashion and think beyond the present moment. Policy-makers in Washington carried out similarly far-sighted initiatives in the years immediately after the Second World War.

Unlike the late 1940s, however, the PRC today confronts powerful adversaries that take steps to block Chinese initiatives. Given its geographical location, it is not surprising that India has reacted first and most decisively to China's growing military and economic involvement in Oman. Strategic competition between Beijing and New Delhi was evident as early as the 1990s, and by the time that the PLAN arrived in the Gulf of Aden, India and Oman were routinely carrying out joint naval exercises.

Nevertheless, PRC-India rivalry intensified only after Beijing embarked on a combination of military operations and economic projects that gives China the potential to shape the future structure of the regional political economy. It is doubtful that Beijing intends to jeopardize the security interests of New Delhi. Nevertheless, India has responded in a way that is likely to make future confrontations considerably more perilous.

* Opinions expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Anadolu Agency.

Anadolu Agency website contains only a portion of the news stories offered to subscribers in the AA News Broadcasting System (HAS), and in summarized form.Please contact us for subscription options.

Oman-China relations and Indian Ocean security
 
I thought it was posted here awhile back. It was suspended due to lack of funding.
Well there was going to be excess capacity that wasn't needed immediately, so it was deemed prudent to redirect the resources to areas of priority
 
I take back my response.....


Wanjigi and jacob juma were waiting to eat from Greenfield jkia. Uhuru had to cancel.

Uhuru came with his cartels and cancelled the project in the process Kenya got fined billions for contract cancellation.
 
Wanjigi and jacob juma were waiting to eat from Greenfield jkia. Uhuru had to cancel.

Uhuru came with his cartels and cancelled the project in the process Kenya got fined billions for contract cancellation.
😱
 
TBT:
As Kunyans r languishing with a new railway city station promised by the UK, here is the forgotten moment of pride by them!
 
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