Railways were planned in Afghanistan since the 19th century but never completed due to the Great Game between the Russian and British empires followed by the Soviets and the Americans. At least one rail track was built in the capital of Kabul during the 1920s but was dismantled as Afghan leaders resisted the railway age. Various rail projects have been proposed in recent years, to support mining projects which would drive economic growth.
Currently there is a rail service between Uzbekistan and the city of Mazar-i-Sharif in the north.[1] The Afghan government expects to have the line extended to Kabul and then to the eastern border town of Torkham, connecting with Pakistan Railways. The work is carried out by China Metallurgical Group Corporation (MCC) and is expected to be completed by 2014.[2] Another $350 million rail way project between Mazar-i-Sharif and Turkmenistan is in the early phase.[3] India is finalising a plan to construct a 900-km railway line that will connect Chabahar port in Iran, being built with Indian help, to the mineral-rich Hajigak region of Afghanistan.[4]
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In the 1920s, King Amanullah bought three small steam locomotives from Henschel of Kassel in Germany, and these were put to work on a 7 km roadside tramway linking Kabul and Darulaman. The tramway closed (date unknown) but the locomotives still exist at Kabul museum in Darulaman.[5] December 1922 issue of the The Locomotive magazine mentions "Travellers from Afghanistan state a railway is being laid down for a distance of some six miles from Kabul to the site of the new city of Darulaman, and also that some of the rolling stock for it is being manufactured in the Kabul workshops". The August 1928 issue of The Locomotive magazine mentions "the only railway at present in Afghanistan is five miles long, between Kabul and Darulaman".Three small steam locomotives were acquired from Henschel of Kassel in Germany.[5]
Over the last century and a half, plenty of proposals have been made about building railways in Afghanistan. In 1885, the New York Times wrote about plans for connecting the Russian Transcaspian Railway, then under construction, with British India via Sarakhs, Herat, and Kandahar. When completed, the project would allow British officers to travel from London to India, mostly by rail, in 11 to 12 days (crossing the English Channel, the Black Sea, and the Caspian Sea by boat).[6]
About 1928, proposals were put forward for a railway to link Jalalabad with Kabul, eventually connecting to the (then) Indian system at Peshawar. Lines to join Kabul with Kandahar and Herat would follow later. Owing to political upheavals these plans were not implemented.
In the 1950s a hydroelectric power station was built at Sarobi, east of Kabul. Three Henschel four-wheel 600 mm (1 ft 11 5⁄8 in)-gauge diesel hydraulic locos built in 1951 (works numbers 24892, 24993, 24994) were supplied to the power station.
In 1979 mining and construction locomotive builder Bedia Maschinenfabrik of Bonn supplied five D35/6 two axle diesel-hydraulic 600 mm (1 ft 11 5⁄8 in)-gauge locomotives, works numbers 150-154, to an unknown customer in Afghanistan.
The fate of these locomotives is unknown.
The choice of future track gauges in Afghanistan presents several difficulties. Afghanistan is surrounded by three different kinds of gauge, and yet is almost completely without railways.[7]
Until the 21st century, there were less than 25 kilometres of railway inside the country, all of which is built to 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 5⁄6 in) Russian gauge. For strategic reasons, past Afghan governments preferred to discourage the construction of railways which could aid foreign interference in Afghanistan by Britain or Russia.[7]
Iran to the west uses standard gauge, 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in), as does China to the east; to the south, Pakistan uses 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) Indian gauge, while to the north, the central Asian republics of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan use 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 5⁄6 in) gauge.
In 2010, the gauge question was resolved so that the internal network would be initially 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in).[8]
There are currently no passenger services or stations in Afghanistan. If any of the various cross-border links are completed and opened to passenger service, new stations would have to be built.
Details of the preliminary list of stations to be served, which circle the central mountains of Afghanistan are available.[8]
The Afghan government is due to form a railway construction commission with technical cooperation provided by European commission, which was discussed in the G8 meeting in July 2011. The commission will be responsible to look after construction work of the railway networks in order to oversee the construction of a rail network within the country and their connection with the country's neighbors.[9] In October 2011, the Asian Development Bank approved fundings for the Afghanistan's national rail authority.[10]
In the early 1980s, the Soviet Union built an approximately 15 kilometers rail line from Termez in Uzbekistan to Kheyrabad in Afghanistan, crossing the Amu Darya river on the Afghanistan–Uzbekistan Friendship Bridge.[11] In January 2010, construction began on a 75-kilometer (47 mi) extension line between Afghanistan and Uzbekistan; this line is also 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 5⁄6 in) gauge as the first one built by the Soviets.[12] By December 2010, it began carrying construction materials for other reconstruction projects in Afghanistan.[13]
The line, which starts from Hairatan freight terminal to Mazar-i-Sharif Airport in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-i-Sharif, was completed and is operated by Uzbekistan's national railway Uzbekiston Temir Yullari for a three-year-term until Afghanistan's own railways department takes over. The first freight services began running in August 2011;[1][14] in December 2011, the media again reported the opening of this railway.[15]
A 10-kilometer long line extends from Serhetabat in Turkmenistan to the town of Towraghondi in Afghanistan. An upgrade of this Soviet-built line began in 2007.[16]
The nearest railhead in Iran is a 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) standard gauge freight line which terminates at Mashhad.[17] This line is currently being extended 202 kilometers east to Herat.[18][19] On April 17, 2007 Afghan Foreign Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta said that the executive operations of the Khaf-Herat railway (freight only) project had begun in 2006.
Two broad gauge 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) Pakistan Railways lines with steep gradient terminate on the border at Chaman and Torkham. In July 2010, Pakistan and Afghanistan signed a Memorandum of understanding for going ahead with the laying of rail tracks between the two countries. Work on the proposed project is set to start in the next four months. The rail tracks would link Quetta in Pakistan with Kandahar in Afghanistan and Peshawar in Pakistan with Jalalabad in Afghanistan.[20]
In May 2010, Afghanistan's Minister of Mines set out plans for a major new 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) standard gauge rail corridor across northern Afghanistan; from Shir Khan Bandar (near the Tajik border), via Naibabad where it would connect with the 1520 mm gauge line from Uzbekistan (under construction), and then through Mazar-i-Sharif to Herat. At Herat, it would connect with the planned line from the Iranian border.[21]
In September 2010, China Metallurgical Group Corporation (MCC) signed an agreement[22] with the Afghan Minister of Mines to investigate construction of a north-south railway across Afghanistan, running from Mazar-i-Sharif to Kabul and then to the eastern border town of Torkham. MCC was recently awarded a copper mining concession at Mes Aynak which would be linked to this railway. MCC is constructing a 921km long 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) gauge railway line that will link Kabul with Uzbekistan in the north and Pakistan in the east.[2]
A framework agreement on the construction of a 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 5⁄6 in) gauge railway line from Turkmenistan to Afghanistan was signed between Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai and Turkmenistan’s President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov on 28 May 2011. The railway will connect Aqina harbor with Andkhoy district in the country's northern Faryab province. Turkmenistan has taken the responsibility for the survey, design and the construction of this railway and a group of technicians will be gathered to start the work of this railway soon. The newly planned railway is part of the 126km long railway network that will start from Turkmenistan's Karki town entering Afghanistan through Aqina border and then extends 36km into Afghanistan to Andkhoy district. The railway line will be effective in boosting trade relations, as it will help grow the Afghan economy, and thus Afghanistan will gain access to Caspian sea and the European countries. The railway line will connect Afghanistan with the Turkmenistan railway network in Central Asia that finally ends in Europe.[23][24]
India is finalising a plan to construct a 900-km railway line that will connect Chabahar port in Iran, being built with Indian help, to the mineral-rich Hajigak region of Afghanistan.[25]
There are no rail links to China or Tajikistan, though a connection to the latter was proposed in 2008.[26]
The initial phase of railway construction from 2010 sees the creation of five break-of-gauge stations.[8]