Photo: Kristy Siegfried/IRIN. Nsanje Port officially opened in 2010, but has yet to become operational
Source: IRIN
NSANJE, 10 May 2012 (IRIN) - Visitors arriving in Nsanje, the sleepy
capital of Malawi’s southernmost district, are greeted by a large
yellowing billboard announcing: “The dream becomes reality. Nsanje Port
opens October 2010.” But those who go to the port will find little more
than a concrete quay with a couple of dozen mooring posts, and a few
fishermen manoeuvring crude dug-out canoes through the murky brown
waters of the Shire River.
For former President Bingu wa Mutharika, the construction of an inland
port at Nsanje meant linking land-locked Malawi with the Indian Ocean
port of Chinde, 238 kilometres away in neighbouring Mozambique, through
the Shire-Zambezi Waterway project. The aim was to reduce the high costs
of importing and exporting goods by road via Malawi’s commercial
capital, Blantyre and the Mozambican port city of Beria - a round trip
of about 1,200 kilometres.
But Mutharika’s enthusiasm for the project was not matched by his
counterpart in Mozambique. As Mutharika presided over the official
opening of the port in October 2010, flanked by former Zambian president
Rupiah Banda and Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe, he had to admit to
the crowd gathered to witness the arrival of the first barge that the
Mozambican government had called for environmental and feasibility
studies before it would allow any barges to navigate the Zambezi River
portion of the waterway, which flows through its territory.
Since then, the port has sat idle, gradually shedding nuts and bolts to
vandals and becoming the focus of increasing resentment from local
people promised jobs and development. Nsanje resident Rose Samuel, 32,
said the only improvement to the town has been the paving of a 50-km
stretch of road linking Nsanje with Bangula, the next town. Much of the
remaining 130km of road between Nsanje and Blantyre has yet to be
tarred.
“There’s no evidence that Nsanje will ever be a big port city,” said
Samuel. “We’ve heard that down the river it’s so narrow that a ship
can’t pass, so we don’t think [the port] will be in use anytime soon.”
Land grabbed
Samuel has more reason to be bitter than most. Her family was among
about 300 that used to farm land now occupied by the port. In early 2010
the government communicated through the local Traditional Authority
[the chief], that the land was needed for the port and families would be
compensated according to the size of their plot.
“Those families affected had to uproot maize that was already planted,”
said Samuel. “Some were old people who left crying - that was their only
source of income.”
Samuel’s family received a mere 5,000 kwacha (US$20) for one hectare of
ancestral land, for which they had no title deeds. Her family now
survive by doing piece-work and renting a small plot of land to grow
food. “The weather here is bad always, and most of the time we live on
potatoes. By the river it was wetter and the soil was better,” she said.
Many others have yet to receive anything. “People are worried that if
they can grab land without paying, what will stop them removing more
people from the area.”
Her concern is justified. Townspeople have been told by the Traditional
Authority not to build any new houses because the land has been
earmarked for development, and Nsanje’s District Commissioner, Rodney
Simwaka, told IRIN that his office has received 4,000 applications for
land from developers who are banking on the port eventually becoming
operational.
Simwaka said the applications had not yet been processed but village
headman Black Richman Khembo told IRIN, “Lots of land has been bought by
rich people hoping to make money. So far they are letting people remain
on the land, but someday they will probably kick them off.”
Project shelved
Simwaka declined to comment on recent statements by Jerry Jana, Director
of Economic Affairs for the People’s Party, Malawi’s new ruling party
following Mutharika’s unexpected death in April 2012, that long-term
projects like the Nsanje port would be shelved for the time being while
the government focused on issues of immediate concern like the country’s
crippling shortages of fuel and foreign exchange.
“We need full support of the Mozambican authorities to go ahead,” Jana
told IRIN, adding that the requested environmental impact and
feasibility studies had yet to be carried out.
The African Development Bank (AfDB) has agreed to fund the feasibility
study that formed part of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on the
Shire-Zambezi Waterway project signed by Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia
in April 2007.
Responding by email to questions from IRIN, AfDB’s resident
representative for Malawi, Andrew Mwaba, said the Southern African
Development Community (SADC), the executing agency for the project, is
“working on fulfilling conditions precedent to the first disbursement
[of funding for the feasibility study],” and that the study was
proceeding. “The project is in the interest of three governments and
shelving [it] will be against the MoU the three governments signed.”
Village headman Khembo was among those who lost land when the port was
built, but unlike Samuel, he holds on to the hope that the port will
eventually open and provide opportunities and employment, “if not for me
then maybe my children”. Lack of jobs has already pushed two of his
eight children to leave Nsanje, one for South Africa and the other for
Mozambique.
“If the port starts operating, Nsanje will change for the better,” he said. “Then I won’t mind about my land.”