REGIONAL TRADE

Construct four-lane road to ease Busia cargo clearance - EABC

In October 2020, truck traffic snarl-up to the Busia border exceeded 15 kilometers, disrupting cross-border trade and escalating the cost of doing business.

In Summary
  • Nearly 1,000 trucks were mobbing goods through the border on weekdays with the number increasing to 2,000 trucks on weekends.
  • The council has further urged revenue authorities to install cargo scanners at border points to facilitate trade.

East Africa states should prioritise border post infrastructure improvement for faster movement of gods and people, the  East Africa Business Council (EABC) says.

The Council said poor infrastructure continues to be a huge trade barrier in the region and a major constraint to integration and development even as cross border business rebounds.

The council's chief executive Peter Mutuku Mathuki said this when visited the Busia One-Stop Border Post (OSBP where he recommend the construction of a four-lane road to ease cargo clearance.

Nearly 1,000 trucks were moving  goods through the border on weekdays with the number increasing to 2,000 trucks on weekends.

“The first lane should be to transport general cargo. The second lane to be used by passengers. The third can be for fresh produce and the fourth for hazardous products,” Mathuki said. 

 

“Insufficient parking space for cargo trucks along the northern transport corridor trunk routes still pauses a safety challenge for the traders and border communities,” he said.

The council has further urged revenue authorities to install cargo scanners at border points to facilitate trade.

According to the African Development Bank (AfDB, the East Africa region is projected to recover to 3.7  per cent in the baseline scenario and 2.8  per cent in the worst-case scenario this year, under the assumption that COVID-19 would be contained in the short-to-medium term.

In October last year, truck traffic snarl-up to the Busia border exceeded 15 kilometres, disrupting cross-border trade and escalating the cost of doing business.

This saw EABC call for mutual recognition of Covid-19 tests across the region.

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