Fresh damning details emerge about MV Dar
Works minister John Magufuli (left) is escorted by Coast Regional
Commissioner Evarist Ndikilo upon his arrival in Mbegani, Bagamoyo,
aboard the MV Dar es Salaam during a trial run last month.
Dar es Salaam. New details have
emerged that could explain why the government goofed in purchasing the
Sh8 billion MV Dar es Salaam passenger ferry that experts now fear could
be grounded before the job for which it was bought starts.
Investigations this week by The Citizen
revealed that relevant authorities did not carry out any feasibility
study to establish if there was need for the ferry in the first place.
The feasibility study, according to a marine expert, would also have
informed the type or make of the ferry and if there would be the
requisite support infrastructure to operate it locally.
The fresh details will add to the growing
controversy surrounding the procurement of the 300-sitting capacity
ferry and reported technical deficiencies that may render it
unusable.
The government through the ministry of Works
ordered for the ferry in 2013 to help decongest Bagamoyo and Ali-Hassan
Mwinyi roads by plying the nearly 78 kilometres from Dar-es Salaam port
to Bagamoyo.
But there are now fears that the ferry builders
may have got it wrong from the onset, particularly on the choice of
material used and its speed as the three long hours that its takes to
cover one-leg of the route may not be feasible. The ferry has reportedly
been unable to reach a top speed of 20 knots as requested by the
government and, instead, tops out at between 14 and 15 knots.
The expansion of Bagamoyo road over a year ago
that has since minimised the dreaded gridlock could also impact
negatively on the deployment of the ferry, while reported resistance by
private beach plot owners to let the government construct anchoring
berths along the route is another headache.
Three months after the boat arrived, construction
of the planned jetties for passengers has not started. The jetties are
to be erected in Kawe, Mbweni, Jangwani, Rungwe Oceanic, Kaole and
Mbegani, areas found to have no public access roads to the beach or
public transport connectivity.
Owners of some of these plots have won temporal
court orders to block construction of the jetties on their land. The
ministy has already admitted that this shortcoming will cause a six
month delay in putting the ferry into use.
The ministry of Works apparently by-passed the
need for a feasibility study, instead directly commissioning a Danish
firm -JGH Marine - to supply the ferry which members of a Parliamentary
Committee described a week ago as “substandard.”
The Citizen has learnt that Tanzania
Electrical, Mechanical and Electronics Services Agency (Temesa) which
owns and operate the ferry did not conduct a feasibility study on the
project.
The Citizen can also reveal that
hydrographic survey to measure physical features and descriptions of the
route of MV Dar es Salaam, prediction of their change over time for
purpose of safety of navigation was not done.
The survey defines shore line and under water features and are crucial in design and construction of a ferry.