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| A file picture of the January 18, 1983, inauguration of part of Trans-Gabon Railway (AFP Photo/STRINGER) |
Franceville (Gabon) (AFP) - The sky turns from indigo to ebony as the tropical night falls, and the train patiently thrusts through the jungle towards its destination, still hundreds of kilometres (miles) away.
The trek
has the hallmarks of one of the world's Great Forgotten Train Journeys -- a
voyage through 648 kilometres (just over 400 miles) of lush equatorial forest.
The train
is the brainchild of Gabon's former president, Omar Bongo, who ruled for 42
years until his death in 2009.
In the
1970s, he dreamed of linking the central African state's resource-rich interior
to the Atlantic coast -- and he saw it through, despite being rebuffed by the
World Bank, which refused to fund it on the grounds that it was not
economically viable.
Today, the
"Bongo Train", as it is affectionately known, remains the country's
sole railway line, linking 23 stations from the coastal capital Libreville to
distant Franceville, the country's third most populous city.
"The
Transgabonais binds Gabonese society," declares Christian Antchouet Roux,
the stationmaster at Franceville.
About 320,000 people take the train every year, a sign of its affordability for the average Gabonese.
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Omar Bongo
and former French president Francois Mitterrand on
the Transgabonais in January
1983 (AFP Photo/STF)
|
About 320,000 people take the train every year, a sign of its affordability for the average Gabonese.
Ticket
prices depend on the time of year and class -- the train has a VIP carriage, as
well as first and second classes.
Passengers
travel only at nighttime but in air-conditioned comfort -- a rarity in the
world's poorest continent -- and the blue and yellow compartments are modern.
One of them
is Miyha Koumba, a young student in Libreville who uses it to visit her family
at the other end of the line.
"I
take the train at least four times a year. I can visit my parents
regularly," she said, arriving in Libreville at 7:00 am bleary-eyed,
having departed Franceville at 5:30 pm the day before.
During the
day, the train hauls manganese -- a key export after oil -- from the interior
to the oceanside capital.
Critics and champions
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Long haul:
The project cost $1.65 billion (AFP Photo/STRINGER)
|
Critics and champions
Touting the
train as a symbol of national unity and modernisation, Bongo doggedly pressed
on with the plan, saying: "If we need to have a pact with the Devil, we'll
do that."
Fortune
smiled on Gabon's leader in 1973 when the OPEC cartel of oil producing nations
raised prices dramatically, filling the country's coffers and enabling him to
start construction with the additional help of Western aid, notably from former
colonial ruler France.
Bongo
flagged off the project -- the largest in Africa at the time -- on December 30,
1973.
It cost
$1.65 billion (more than 1.5 billion euros), and millions of trees were felled
to cut the swathe through the jungle for the track, which is unelectrified.
In 1986,
the last stretch was inaugurated in the presence of then French prime minister
Jacques Chirac.
Critics of
the project have long pointed to its cost, to its use as a political tool for
Bongo, whose partisan stronghold was centred in the region where Franceville is
located, and to French involvement.
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French
President Francois Mitterrand (L) and Gabon's President Omar Bongo
inaugurate
the second section of the Transgabonais railway in Franceville
in January 1983
(AFP Photo/DANIEL JANIN)
|
"Since
its creation, the Transgabonais has been closely linked to France and its
interests," US law professor Douglas Yates, author of "The Rentier
State in Africa: Oil Rent Dependency & Neocolonialism in the Republic of
Gabon", told AFP.
Its
champions view it as a critical piece of infrastructure for Gabon's
development.
There is a
road running parallel to the tracks. But it is riddled with potholes, making
the journey much longer, far less comfortable, and dangerous too.
Derailments and elephants
In a
country which has been grappling with the effects of falling oil prices since
2014, the importance of manganese for the economy has ballooned.
"Without
manganese, this train could not exist," said Gabonese economist Mays
Mouissi.
According
to an economic report by the Gabonese government, the ore accounts for a fourth
of non-oil exports.
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A road
running parallel to the tracks is riddled with potholes
(AFP Photo/STEVE
JORDAN)
|
Although
still volatile, a recent surge in manganese prices over the last couple of
years has boosted the country's oil-dependent economy.
French
mining group Eramet, which extracts 80 percent of Gabon's manganese, recently
said that it wants to boost production by 60 percent by 2023.
But more
than 33 years after the first train started rolling, the line is facing
problems.
There have
been many derailments on a stretch built on unstable terrain and maintenance has
been poor.
Train
services have been further compromised by technical problems, while elephants
wandering over the tracks have caused delays.
To keep the
line going, a massive eight-year revamp was launched in 2015, costing an
estimated 330 million euros.
More than
half of the total will be financed by France together with, ironically, the
World Bank.





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