South Sudan has 248 kilometers (154 mi) of narrow-gauge, single-track railroads that connect Babonosa (north Sudan) with Wau. The line was damaged in the civil war, in which several parts of it were mined; the line was fully rehabilitated with United Nations funds.[1]
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total: 248 km (154 mi)
narrow gauge: 248 km (154 mi) 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) gauge;
The line from Babanosa to Wau was built between 1959 and 1962.[2]
There are proposed extensions from Wau to Juba. There are also plans to link Juba with the Kenyan or Ugandan railway network. [3]
Sources in the Sudan suggested that construction of a new southern extension railway would begin in January 2006, with an estimated cost of $US2 billion. Costello Garang, outgoing Sudanese People's Liberation Movement/Army Commissioner for International Co-operation is quoted by the East African Standard (Nairobi) saying that the necessary "crucial financial deal" has been concluded. A line was to be built from the present railhead, Waw, first south-eastwards to Juba (about 500 km), thence eastwards via Torit to the Kenyan border near Kapoeta (a further 250 km). This would be known as the Sudan-East Africa Railway, the intention being to extend eventually by way of Lokichoggio and Rongai to join the main Kampala-Mombasa route "pending a decision from the Kenyan authorities". It was envisaged that the project would be undertaken by Thormaehlen Holdings of Germany. According to Garang, who was to head the New Sudan Foundation as President and Chief Executive, a line would be constructed in the first instance from Juba southwards along the White Nile to connect with the Ugandan system at Pakwach, about 150 km, where freight will be transshipped, as Uganda uses the 1000 mm gauge unlike Sudan's 1067 mm gauge.
In October 2010, it was announced that ThyssenKrupp was leading a project to link Juba with Gulu, a town in northern Uganda.[4]
Egypt-based Citadel Capital announced it was considering financing a railway between Juba and Tororo, Uganda, through its subsidiary Rift Valley Railways, in August 2011.[5]
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