Zambia and DRC sign joint communiqué about borders

13 Jun 2022 – by Eugene Goddard  3-4 minutes     

Southern  Africa’s long-haul road freight fraternity received good news on Friday  when it became known that a joint communiqué had been signed to turn a  series of Copperbelt borders into 24-hour transits.

Although the information is spare on detail, neglecting to indicate  when round-the-clock operations will be implemented, cross-border  hauliers unanimously welcomed the development.

News of the communiqué came after last Thursday’s meeting in  Chingola, Zambia, attended by customs delegates and related government  executives to thrash out issues causing congestion at borders such as  Kasumbalesa.

The meeting came after a previous problem-solving session was held in  Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, but this time  spoken commitments to resolve trade-crippling bottlenecking have  resulted in a signed undertaking.

The MoU states that “Zambia and the DRC (will) put in place  procedures for 24-hour border operations at Kasumbalesa, Sakania,  Mokambo on the Copperbelt and Kipushi”.

It’s interesting that Kipushi, a south-western crossing into Zambia’s  North-Western Province, has been added into the MoU – perhaps an  indication of Lusaka’s intention to develop the linkage between  Lubumbashi and Solwezi.

Kasumbalesa, Mokambo and Sakania are mostly south- and east-serving borders.

At a recent presentation by the Walvis Bay Corridor Group (WBCG) in  Kitwe, capital of the Copperbelt Province, WBCG head Mbahupu Hippy  Tjivikua bemoaned the fact that cathodes from the DRC couldn’t go  straight south-west out of its copper-mining province of Haut Katanga.

How long it will take Zambia to upgrade its road network out west to  “bitumen standards”, to paraphrase Tjivikua, remains anyone’s guess.

For the time being, though, copper headed to Walvis still has to loop  south-east out of Zambia before making its way due south-west for  shipment out of Namibia.

As for pessimism about long-sought-after bilateral co-operation  between Africa’s two leading copper producers, on Friday detractors took  a backseat after the communiqué was signed.

The undertaking to decongest Kasumbalesa and roll-out 24-hour  operations at the various other borders was signed by Chipoka Mulenga  and Jacques Katwe, respectively Commerce, Trade and Industry minister  for Zambia and governor of Katanga.

The communiqué’s agreements were later confirmed by Frank Tayali, minister of Transport and Logistics for Zambia.

Tayali said the two countries were targeting to clear a minimum of 800 trucks from Zambia into the DRC on a daily basis.

He added that the two neighbours would put in place smart border  operational tools and hard infrastructure improvement to ease and reduce  the cost of cross-border trade.

The question remains, though: when will it all happen?

Source: https://www.freightnews.co.za/article/zambia-and-drc-sign-joint-communique-about-borders 

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