Dubai Telegraph - River boat users pay heavy price for DR Congo's dearth of roads

EUR -
AED 4.244975
AFN 72.820848
ALL 95.94014
AMD 432.845748
ANG 2.069125
AOA 1059.9439
ARS 1612.448734
AUD 1.630495
AWG 2.083478
AZN 1.975557
BAM 1.955854
BBD 2.312344
BDT 140.86392
BGN 1.97576
BHD 0.436373
BIF 3409.360338
BMD 1.155882
BND 1.472956
BOB 7.933839
BRL 6.034974
BSD 1.148121
BTN 106.962842
BWP 15.666656
BYN 3.550075
BYR 22655.290457
BZD 2.309044
CAD 1.587587
CDF 2629.632268
CHF 0.912315
CLF 0.02673
CLP 1055.440177
CNY 7.976107
CNH 7.970767
COP 4269.250781
CRC 537.156773
CUC 1.155882
CUP 30.630877
CVE 110.276655
CZK 24.461703
DJF 204.451609
DKK 7.470992
DOP 69.417337
DZD 152.86546
EGP 60.38409
ERN 17.338232
ETB 179.257046
FJD 2.552824
FKP 0.865823
GBP 0.862028
GEL 3.138164
GGP 0.865823
GHS 12.532325
GIP 0.865823
GMD 85.53555
GNF 10062.063468
GTQ 8.782928
GYD 240.195386
HKD 9.054875
HNL 30.389212
HRK 7.534385
HTG 150.595917
HUF 390.905473
IDR 19574.864484
ILS 3.583986
IMP 0.865823
INR 107.871312
IQD 1503.841849
IRR 1520129.533815
ISK 143.802901
JEP 0.865823
JMD 180.379064
JOD 0.819543
JPY 183.053012
KES 148.900854
KGS 101.079471
KHR 4602.486441
KMF 494.717881
KPW 1040.237132
KRW 1733.840599
KWD 0.354151
KYD 0.956727
KZT 552.128355
LAK 24631.603335
LBP 102816.866801
LKR 357.867823
LRD 210.101297
LSL 19.345045
LTL 3.41302
LVL 0.699181
LYD 7.352777
MAD 10.78784
MDL 20.120127
MGA 4777.504939
MKD 61.659387
MMK 2427.090222
MNT 4126.123457
MOP 9.262658
MRU 45.822843
MUR 53.702177
MVR 17.857711
MWK 1990.910421
MXN 20.5022
MYR 4.552961
MZN 73.864954
NAD 19.345045
NGN 1563.781237
NIO 42.254466
NOK 10.986195
NPR 171.141088
NZD 1.965433
OMR 0.444448
PAB 1.148032
PEN 3.95431
PGK 4.955524
PHP 69.242543
PKR 320.634588
PLN 4.267078
PYG 7460.788537
QAR 4.186943
RON 5.094202
RSD 117.457276
RUB 99.582279
RWF 1676.077146
SAR 4.339533
SBD 9.303214
SCR 16.360031
SDG 694.685812
SEK 10.751888
SGD 1.478948
SHP 0.867211
SLE 28.492821
SLL 24238.283596
SOS 654.969224
SRD 43.347864
STD 23924.427123
STN 24.50259
SVC 10.04528
SYP 128.031659
SZL 19.350045
THB 37.827979
TJS 10.992206
TMT 4.045588
TND 3.390958
TOP 2.783086
TRY 51.215642
TTD 7.781822
TWD 36.948699
TZS 2991.323614
UAH 50.488736
UGX 4339.458641
USD 1.155882
UYU 46.504915
UZS 13994.389439
VES 525.56301
VND 30414.149497
VUV 137.591978
WST 3.171932
XAF 656.026336
XAG 0.015839
XAU 0.000246
XCD 3.123829
XCG 2.068958
XDR 0.815886
XOF 656.026336
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.735655
ZAR 19.390507
ZMK 10404.313415
ZMW 22.474375
ZWL 372.193586
  • CMSC

    0.0200

    22.85

    +0.09%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.37

    +0.59%

  • NGG

    -1.8700

    85.53

    -2.19%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5900

    16.01

    -3.69%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    25.73

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    33.82

    -0.12%

  • AZN

    0.5100

    188.93

    +0.27%

  • BTI

    0.6300

    58.72

    +1.07%

  • RIO

    -2.0700

    85.65

    -2.42%

  • BCC

    -1.9800

    69.86

    -2.83%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.9

    +0.04%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    14.42

    +0.35%

  • JRI

    -0.1630

    12.16

    -1.34%

  • BP

    1.2500

    45.86

    +2.73%

River boat users pay heavy price for DR Congo's dearth of roads
River boat users pay heavy price for DR Congo's dearth of roads / Photo: Glody MURHABAZI - AFP

River boat users pay heavy price for DR Congo's dearth of roads

The cemetery in Mbandaka, a river port city in northwestern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is the final resting place of many victims of the country's repeated river boat accidents.

Text size:

But despite the risks, many feel they have no option but to get on a boat to travel in the vast, landlocked DRC, the size of western Europe.

"I know it's too risky but I have no other choice. There aren't any other means of transport," teacher Nestor Mokwanguba told AFP with resignation, before boarding the King's Sword, a large, motorised dugout canoe bound for Bolomba, 250 kilometres (155 miles) away.

It rains almost all year round in Mbandaka, the capital of Equateur province in the dense rainforest of the Congo Basin of central Africa.

What land routes exist in the province are nearly all dirt roads and the wet climate means they are often impassable.

The DRC has 58,000 kilometres of roads criss-crossing its 2.3-million-square-kilometre (900,000-square-mile) landmass.

But less than five percent (2,700 km) are tarmacked, according to data from the transport ministry.

To get to school, market or work in the fields, locals resort to poorly maintained "river buses".

Day and night, the so-called whaleboats ply the mighty Congo River -- the second longest in Africa and the deepest in the world -- overloaded with both people and cargo.

Vessel owners are often lax about tonnage or safety standards.

The King's Sword churned out thick black smoke as it was pushed out into the fast-flowing current, piled high with goods and passengers, who paid the equivalent of $5.00 (15,000 Congolese francs) for the precarious journey.

"They're travelling in inhuman conditions," fretted the mayor of Mbandaka, who had come to the riverbank to check the boat was not overloaded and the passengers would be provided with life jackets.

Since July 2024, at least 148 people have died in boat accidents on the Congo River and several dozen are still missing, according to an AFP count.

The figures are likely to be a severe underestimation because boat passenger lists are rarely available.

- Fear of the river -

Jean-Florent Munzanza is buried in Mbandaka cemetery. He drowned in a boat sinking on the Congo last year, aged 28.

"There were no storms or waves but the boat was overloaded," Ephesien Mpambi, a friend of Jean-Florent's told AFP of the fatal capsize.

Mpambi, also 28, had been on the vessel and survived the calamity.

After each stop, the whaleboat would leave a little heavier, he recalled. The passengers protested but to no avail.

"If we don't load the boats enough, we won't break even," Clovis Engombe, vice-president of the local shipowners' association, told AFP.

"We are traders first and foremost, and there are no roads so everyone wants to get on the boats."

Shortly before midnight, just 25 kilometres from Mbandaka, the vessel carrying the two young men capsized.

"People started shouting. I was up to my neck in water. I clung to a piece of wood and prayed," Mpambi remembered.

Local residents eventually rescued him. But there was no trace of his friend until Jean-Florent's body floated up to the surface.

"Now I'm afraid of the river," he shuddered.

- Slow progress -

In recent months, the DRC government has repeatedly reminded boat owners that it is forbidden for river vessels to travel at night, overloaded and without life jackets.

At the start of his first term in 2019, President Felix Tshisekedi announced an ambitious infrastructure plan, centred on renovating and building roads that would connect the vast country from north to south and east to west.

But lack of funds and the logistical challenges of implementing the major works programme mean results are slow in coming.

In the cemetery, Munzanza's mother Florence knelt by his gravestone and wept.

"Our son is dead, people are dead and the government has done nothing," she sobbed bitterly.

"The government doesn't care and the whaleboat owners are never punished."

Y.Amjad--DT