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Accident on Kenyan highway chokes EA trade route for 14 hours

An accident involving trucks blocked the highway fromKenya's Indian Ocean port of Mombasa for more than 14 hours on Sunday and Monday.This choked East Africa's main trade route as traffic backed up for 60 km (40 miles) in either direction, police said.Mombasa handles imports such as fuel and other vital goods for Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, South Sudan and eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and interruption of traffic along the highway could affect regional business.

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by REUTERS AND WAMBUA KAVILA

Breakfast-briefing20 January 2019 - 11:58
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The three lorries when they were involved in a head on collision on Sunday at Salama.Photo/COURTESY

An accident involving trucks blocked the highway from

Kenya's Indian Ocean port of Mombasa for more than 14 hours on Sunday and Monday.

This choked East Africa's main trade route as traffic backed up for 60 km (40 miles) in either direction, police said.

Mombasa handles imports such as fuel and other vital goods for Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, South Sudan and eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and interruption of traffic along the highway could affect regional business.

Queues began forming at about 8 pm on Sunday after three trucks were involved in an

accident in the Salama area

about 100 km (65 miles) from Nairobi.

Two drivers died after a fuel tanker crashed into a trailer and burst into flames

at Kima Kiu, a town between Salama and Makindu towns.

The driver of the tanker was burned to death in the

accident on Nairobi-Mombasa Highway at about 8.30am.

A motorist in another vehicle, who rammed into the trailer,

was rushed to hospital in critical condition.

Salama traffic base commander Joseph Nyasani said the tanker was loaded with fuel from Mombasa. He said the truck was headed in the opposite direction.

Police and truckers stuck on the road said although the traffic had started moving slowly, queues were now almost 60 km long on both sides, worsened by overlapping motorists.

"I left Nairobi yesterday morning and over 24 hours later, I am not even halfway to Mombasa," said Alfred Ngesa, a truck driver returning to Mombasa from Kampala, Uganda, where he had delivered steel metal.

"I am supposed to make two trips this week but this traffic will mess up my schedule."

Police deployed cranes to clear the blockage which included a fuel truck that had burnt down after the accident.

"Our officers have been at the affected areas the whole night and right now at least there is some slow movement. By this evening, everything should certainly be back to normal," said Jacinta Muthoni, the

Kenya

Police traffic commandant.

In November 2015, a similar blockage on the same highway took about

.

Port officials in Mombasa said it was too early to feel an impact of the blockage on cargo uptake from the port.

"If the jam continues, it will eventually begin to slow down our operations," said Bernard Osero, the Mombasa port corporate affairs manager.

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