We call it the Chinese debt trap diplomacy for any infrastructure construction projects in the continent and is not permitted under US and NATO foreign policy goals
Only Europe has inter continental transport links Africa, Asia & South America barely have any due to their massive continental size & Geographical barriers. Africa is not a tiny continent like Europe. The DRC alone is almost as big as Europe.
Some African in person reporting here! I can confirm that the Wadi Halfa to Aswan ferry is running as of december '22, but it might not the most convenient way to do the trip. Most people travelling between Sudan and Egypt will take the bus, infact there are direct routes from Khartoum all the way to Cairo and even Alexandria. Hope this is valuable to anyone who wants to attempt this insane feat.
It is not point of that video. The real topic of video - about "only Railway" option in "Cape to Cairo" line. What's why - he was still looked on train option.
I did the inverse in 2018, from Cairo back to Cape Town. Used the train from Alexandria to Aswan, I used a ferry to Sudan I only used rail again in Khartoum unfortunately only started to use rail again when I got to Kenya and then from Mombasa took a bus to Dar Es Salaam. From Dar Es I took the Tazara rail from Tanz to Kapiri Mposhi and then took a train in Bulawayo and then had to take busses inbetween would have been so cool to do it all with a train
do it. i did cairo(alexandria in fact) to cape town in 2019 just make sure you take enough hard western money into sudan and zimbabwe. and accept shit toilets...
A long time in coming .. I did the 'death road' from Isiolo to Moyale sat on the roof bars of a cattle truck on the corrugated track back in the 90s. That's an experience I've no intention of repeating!
It's a blessing that I found this channel. I'm not really a traveler person. But I like to see, to know, to understand the world and its system. Subscribed.
True. There is a northern bound functional passenger railway service past Nairobi. Just that not many people know about it but its beautiful with views of snow peaked mount Kenya.
Bro I work in Logistics last time I was sending trucks in Moyale Kenyan-Ethiopian boarder. Ethiopian doesn't allow foreigner trucks to load in Ethiopia but I'm pretty sure the road is safe all the way to adisabeba. I don't know how is the journey from Adis abeba to Cairo but the journey from Adis abeba to Cape town is pretty safe. I normally send truck from Lusaka Zambia to Nairobi the road is very safe and in good condition and I know many guys who do Lusaka-Johanesburg or Lusaka-Durban by Zimbabwe or Bostwana by Bostwana,they used to use a ferry but now there is brand new bridge in Kazungula. So the road from Adis abeba all the way to Capetown is in good condition by driving. I will advise not to drive during the night. Instead of passing through Ethiopia then passing on the left through Uganda then South Sudan then Sudan. I know you can drive from Kampala to Juba but I don't know the condition from Juba to Khartoum. I know a guy who has attempt to do the half of the journey(the Nile route from Rwanda to Egypte) by foot. One of his partner died of heatstroke in Ugandan Savana but he reached Cairo at the end. There is many people who cross Africa with cars even from Morocco to SA
Juba to Khartoum is in awful condition, theres basically no roads north of the city of Bor in South Sudan. The ones that do exist are unpaved and rife with bandits. Also, the war in Sudan doesnt help much either.
@windoak2113 this was before the war, Thank you didn't know the condition of the road from Bor to Khartoum, I thought, there was a road because before it was a same country or the one which goes with the pipeline.
@stuffsuch518 uh... not really at the moment. Before you could just go via Ethiopia but the border region with sudan has conflict, and plus ethiopia makes you import the car for some reason which costs 100 grand USD (not a typo.) You could go via west and central Africa I guess, just don't go through the sahel.
As of May 2023 there are no long distance passenger trains operating in South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe or Namibia, and Sudan is in a state of war. There were already gaps in the route before 2020, but currently Cape to Cairo by trains is not feasible.
There is a trans-African highway from Mombasa in Kenya to Lagos in Nigeria. And there is a lot more infrastructure in Africa than what was left by the colonialists.
Amazing This is the most excitement journey i have ever seen in my life before Egypt to South Africa We Are Africans. Thank you for watching awesome video!
Hi I'm Kenyan We have 2 types of trains here. The one from Mombasa to Nairobi is the SGR Then we have another to Kamapala MGR. But that gets up to the Kenyan boarder. Not sure about the Ugandan side.
They are curently working on rehabilitating the Ugandan side. By December 2023 we should be having passenger rail services between Kenya and Uganda as far north as Gulu. Problem is south Sudan (practical dead end). Hopefully one day Kenya's SGR makes its way to Kampala and beyond...that will be the game changer in East African rail travel.
This is definitely possible and I wouldn’t even say that hard. I’ve done it in broken chunks through way worse conditions and routes than that mostly train trip. Overland I would go Zimbabwe, Malawi, Tanzania, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, Egypt. All quite safe countries compared to neighbors
africa rn is pretty hard to going from the southern most point to the northern most bc not bc it's impossible but bc infrastructure is shit, conditions aren't great and conflicts (pirates, terrorists, illegal shit). I'm sure there are some safe routes u can find, but u can't just up and go like in say the european union
Yeah, it's not as difficult as people make out. Locals still have to get about so there's transport. Main constraints are closed borders. I managed to get through Eritrea - Ethiopia in the very brief window when the border was open in the mid 90s. Now I think it's via Sudan.
In 1980 I went to Sudan. In those days you could get to Juba! Also you could use the Nile steamers In the 1950's a combination of of river and lake steamers along with a few short bus connections made it relatively easy. A friend of mine father did the Journey in 1950. The high point for him was the ship across Lake Albert the SS Robert Coryndon Both Earnest Hemmingway and Sir Winston Churchill used her! With the latter noting that she had "The Best Library Afloat!"
Great work here. i discovered your channel through Johnny Harris he shared this link on his community tab. it landed me here. i loved your works you story line is jhus amazing. being African what you talking about makes sense. we really need a inter continental transport route
I am going from Cairo to Khartoum mostly by rail in a few weeks. From Cairo to Aswan is easy as well as from wadi Halfa to Khartoum, just need to cross the lake Nubia by ferry and I know many people who have done that. I dont think the “gap” between Nairobi to Khartoum is that challenging if you are ok with taking buses and cars through Kenya, Ethiopia and Sudan. I plan to do it with other female African travellers like myself so if we can do it anyone can. You have to aware of safety of course but its doable.
Does it count to have done Alexandria to Abu Simbel and then Cape to Khartoum all in the same year (2009)? No trains though, except one across northern Mozambique.
Most of that route is safe & one can easily drive by road from cape town to Addis Ababa. The road is also in good condition. The only issue is crossing from Ethiopia to Sudan into Egypt. But one can also travel through Uganda to Juba then into Khartoum direct to cape town.
Crossing from Ethiopia into Sudan and then Egypt isnt an issue either, there are highways connecting all of them. You just have to have the paperwork ready and plan accomidations of course.
Took the train from Cairo to Aswan in 2014. Take a spare towel that you would like to throw away. The first class seats were so black from grime it was tough to sit on for 20 odd hours. Hopefully they have changed the carriages because those haven't been cleaned in years.
You can travel by fail from cape town SA to Gulu. In Uganda by rail. Gulu is on the border of Uganda and South Sudan. Soin order to reach Cairo therefore you have only a short distance to cover i e South Sudan to.Egypt..
The contemporary Portuguese project : "pink map" / "mapa cor de rosa", that intended to connect Angola and Mozambique, Indic and South Atlantic, was a more realistic one. Unfortunately the two colonial powers collided resulting in the British ultimatum to Portugal and consequently the fall of the Portuguese monarchy. Something that is a stain in the oldest alliance between Portugal and England (Treaty of Windsor) .
Lova your content! I'm very interested in all things travel and exploring Africa. Been to Capetown x3 in the last 4 years. I would love to link up with you to explore movement across Africa for Africans. It's a shame Africans cannot enjoy Thier continent
Africa needs at least two to three rail network from South Africa to north Africa and Europe to enhance trade,tourism bwt the 2 continents. There is need for another separate three rail network from Middle East to connect Africa thereby enhancing spiritual tourism and trade. Both the lines would bring out the African landlocked Countries and at the same time reduce stresses on roads network in Africa.
There is a passenger line between Nairobi and Nanyuki. Views of central Kenya and the snow peak of mount Kenya. It ends close to the middle of Kenya. Hopefully one day it will connect to Ethiopia.
Trains? 😅 I live in Nigeria and I'm pretty sure that trains basically don't work here at all. I've only ever heard of someone taking a train once in my life and that was ten years ago, and he even said that the train stopped functioning a few months after his travel. Sadly, Nobody here thinks about trains when they want to go anywhere
@@AmeenRidwan it wasn't supposed to change what you said. Its letting you know that what you said is going to change. The lack of modern infrastructure is going to be a thing of the past over the next couple decades
Are you from Lagos? There is a direct train to Ibadan that is very reliable that I always use there is also the new train that was built from cms to badagry side
I thought a Cairo Lagos passenger-cum-freight rail link can make a lot of sense as it will shorten the journey between these 2 important economic centers in Africa.
Unfortunately the Zimbabwean trains are not running anymore ever since Covid. Only local trains from Harare are running, the four national lines are put on halt without a prospect of restart at the moment. Beautiful videography regardless
Super interesting 🚂 Africa needs accessible and SAFE public transport! How do I tag all the appropriate governments 😂?! I live here so no one come for me.
If it was for cargo trains with multiple industrial complex around it then it would have been a great way for trade with in Africa right now it's a big pile of debt
Progress in Africa is like progress made in a morbidly obese person’s weight loss journey. The difference in the 1st year is not especially noticeable because going from morbidly obese to slightly less morbidly obese would probably not be noticed by anyone except for those who see that person every day. The real difference comes after 1-4 years of weight loss and exercise. Turn those years to decades, and you get a similar story with Africa. It will likely be another 30 years before Africa looks anything like even the poorest of the EU’s members.
That's because the US government automobile industry actively fought against and sabotage the development of rail lines in most of Latin America during the 20th century
😂😂Yet the imbecile is talking as if every other continent is connected by Rail except Africa. Only Europe has a continental Railway system. Asia, the Americas & Africa don't.
Africa will never have an interconnected railway network. Due to historic reasons, they will be stuck with multiple networks of different gauges in different parts of africa. The southern third uses 1067mm gauge, whilt the states north to the sahara desert use standard gauge, and everything beween istn´t interconnected and are just seperate lines that use various different gauges. The chinese prefer to build with standard gauge.
I just came back from Zambia. Transport in Africa is a big problem and also a big business. Trains are outdated and if they are going they are overcrowded with all kinds of people and animals. The most common and acceptable way for foreigners is to travel in buses. You have the choice between a cheap mini-bus (26 people in a 14 seater!) or the more expensive travel buses which are way more comfortable than all the other options (except planes). The question is not to get somewhere but much more how! What you definitely need is time to do it. Africans don’t know anything about time! They have all the time of the world… Entering Africa is a different universe where normal conditions don’t exist. Take it or leave it, you cannot change anything there.
The continent of Africa has a bright future. There are new leaders arising with plans on bringing the continent together. Instead of a bunch of small countries a more united Africa. The colonizers divided Africa into a bunch of small countries to keep them from ever becoming a super power. In the past every time a new leader will step up with plans to Unite Africa, War breaks out and the Europeans are always involved. China has been building railways, ports, dams, power sects ,and other infrastructure. It's sad that the Europeans continue to prioritize Colonizing Africa. Throughout history all they did was destabilize. So far it seems china isn't getting involved in African relations and politics. Although that can always change.
It seems like China is more interested in making more allies/trading partners than colonies (makes sense though China's geography and resources is amazing)
As a Pan-Africanist I do not appreciate how this guy portrays Africa. While many TH-camrs are trying to promote the continent, I have no idea what the purpose of this video is. There are ways you could have communicated the same message without painting Africa in such a bad light. The only thing I like about this is the maps.
Not even South Africa can fix potholes. The rest of Africa has no chance. Blame colonialism and proxy wars if you want but they are not the biggest problem by a long way.
I'm sorry I have to give you a fail. You can't just say well. There's 3000 km that you can't do it so just get that far?? It's like saying I can walk from the United States to China but I have to walk on water in certain spots. Well that doesn't count.
Africa needs more inter-continental transport links to really succeed. Glad to see them make tremendous progress as of late!
We call it the Chinese debt trap diplomacy for any infrastructure construction projects in the continent and is not permitted under US and NATO foreign policy goals
Passenger rail link the entire route is what’s really needed.
You mean interstate?
@@champan250 that is 0
Only Europe has inter continental transport links Africa, Asia & South America barely have any due to their massive continental size & Geographical barriers. Africa is not a tiny continent like Europe. The DRC alone is almost as big as Europe.
Some African in person reporting here! I can confirm that the Wadi Halfa to Aswan ferry is running as of december '22, but it might not the most convenient way to do the trip. Most people travelling between Sudan and Egypt will take the bus, infact there are direct routes from Khartoum all the way to Cairo and even Alexandria. Hope this is valuable to anyone who wants to attempt this insane feat.
It is not point of that video. The real topic of video - about "only Railway" option in "Cape to Cairo" line.
What's why - he was still looked on train option.
I did the inverse in 2018, from Cairo back to Cape Town. Used the train from Alexandria to Aswan, I used a ferry to Sudan I only used rail again in Khartoum unfortunately only started to use rail again when I got to Kenya and then from Mombasa took a bus to Dar Es Salaam. From Dar Es I took the Tazara rail from Tanz to Kapiri Mposhi and then took a train in Bulawayo and then had to take busses inbetween would have been so cool to do it all with a train
And now i kinda wanna do a cape to cairo... I do blame you, just so you know.
I'm a bad influence!
do it.
i did cairo(alexandria in fact) to cape town in 2019
just make sure you take enough hard western money into sudan and zimbabwe.
and accept shit toilets...
@@driaan_louw email? , My profile picture is actually at landsdowne Capetown
There is now a highway from Capetown to Cairo ,tarmac all weather road through Tanzania, Kenya and Ethiopia.
Elon Musk is a 🙌 legend 🙌 Cecil Rhodes is a piece of 💩 that's all I'm going say on that🤫
A long time in coming .. I did the 'death road' from Isiolo to Moyale sat on the roof bars of a cattle truck on the corrugated track back in the 90s. That's an experience I've no intention of repeating!
@@joegrey9807 I can assure you if you try again you will be shocked; the road is now TARMACKED. unbelievable.
@@eacoincmubiru5894 yes, that must make trade and transport so much better! Brilliant news!
My family went on this trip in 1973 and ending in South Africa where we stayed 3 years. So glad my dad took 1000's of photos.
There is a railway operating between Dar es Salaam and Arusha, and there is a railway from Arusha to Mombasa (not functional) but under renovation.
No need to go to Dar es Salaam, unless you want to. You can go Nairobi-Arusha-Dodoma-Iringa-Mbeya-Tunduma cross to Zambia.
It's a blessing that I found this channel. I'm not really a traveler person. But I like to see, to know, to understand the world and its system.
Subscribed.
The trans-African highway needs to connect at places it stops and there should be a middle highway in the Sahara
Definitely adding this to my bucket list.
Loving the Zimbabwean influence on the last tune! Great content and editing too
I just watched the whole video on Bright Trip. Man, sooo good!!
Oh yeah, watch the whole thing!! www.brighttrip.com/videos/why-there-is-no-cape-to-cairo
Thanks for the deep research on this.
Africa needs trains, big time.
You forgot about Nairobi to Nanyuki(north central kenya) railway using the old lunatic express.
True. There is a northern bound functional passenger railway service past Nairobi. Just that not many people know about it but its beautiful with views of snow peaked mount Kenya.
Bro I work in Logistics last time I was sending trucks in Moyale Kenyan-Ethiopian boarder. Ethiopian doesn't allow foreigner trucks to load in Ethiopia but I'm pretty sure the road is safe all the way to adisabeba. I don't know how is the journey from Adis abeba to Cairo but the journey from Adis abeba to Cape town is pretty safe. I normally send truck from Lusaka Zambia to Nairobi the road is very safe and in good condition and I know many guys who do Lusaka-Johanesburg or Lusaka-Durban by Zimbabwe or Bostwana by Bostwana,they used to use a ferry but now there is brand new bridge in Kazungula. So the road from Adis abeba all the way to Capetown is in good condition by driving. I will advise not to drive during the night.
Instead of passing through Ethiopia then passing on the left through Uganda then South Sudan then Sudan. I know you can drive from Kampala to Juba but I don't know the condition from Juba to Khartoum.
I know a guy who has attempt to do the half of the journey(the Nile route from Rwanda to Egypte) by foot. One of his partner died of heatstroke in Ugandan Savana but he reached Cairo at the end. There is many people who cross Africa with cars even from Morocco to SA
Juba to Khartoum is in awful condition, theres basically no roads north of the city of Bor in South Sudan. The ones that do exist are unpaved and rife with bandits. Also, the war in Sudan doesnt help much either.
@windoak2113 this was before the war, Thank you didn't know the condition of the road from Bor to Khartoum, I thought, there was a road because before it was a same country or the one which goes with the pipeline.
@@windoakis it possible to still do this journey safely, maybe using another route?
@stuffsuch518 uh... not really at the moment. Before you could just go via Ethiopia but the border region with sudan has conflict, and plus ethiopia makes you import the car for some reason which costs 100 grand USD (not a typo.)
You could go via west and central Africa I guess, just don't go through the sahel.
Awesome Dri, I am inspired. Though just doing Muizenberg to Woodstock train journey is pretty intense.
Lol exactly, impossible journey
As of May 2023 there are no long distance passenger trains operating in South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe or Namibia, and Sudan is in a state of war. There were already gaps in the route before 2020, but currently Cape to Cairo by trains is not feasible.
There is a trans-African highway from Mombasa in Kenya to Lagos in Nigeria. And there is a lot more infrastructure in Africa than what was left by the colonialists.
I was about to say that
Amazing This is the most excitement journey i have ever seen in my life before Egypt to South Africa We Are Africans. Thank you for watching awesome video!
Hello bright trip actually there's a extra train (old British railway 🛤) 🚉 from Nairobi to kisumu i feel you left that out
Take a bicycle with and you will get there and have beautiful vistas, foods and conversations!
I am sudanese and i didn't know these lines existed lol
Hi I'm Kenyan
We have 2 types of trains here.
The one from Mombasa to Nairobi is the SGR
Then we have another to Kamapala MGR.
But that gets up to the Kenyan boarder. Not sure about the Ugandan side.
They are curently working on rehabilitating the Ugandan side. By December 2023 we should be having passenger rail services between Kenya and Uganda as far north as Gulu. Problem is south Sudan (practical dead end). Hopefully one day Kenya's SGR makes its way to Kampala and beyond...that will be the game changer in East African rail travel.
This is definitely possible and I wouldn’t even say that hard. I’ve done it in broken chunks through way worse conditions and routes than that mostly train trip.
Overland I would go Zimbabwe, Malawi, Tanzania, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, Egypt. All quite safe countries compared to neighbors
africa rn is pretty hard to going from the southern most point to the northern most bc not bc it's impossible but bc infrastructure is shit, conditions aren't great and conflicts (pirates, terrorists, illegal shit). I'm sure there are some safe routes u can find, but u can't just up and go like in say the european union
Yeah, it's not as difficult as people make out. Locals still have to get about so there's transport. Main constraints are closed borders. I managed to get through Eritrea - Ethiopia in the very brief window when the border was open in the mid 90s. Now I think it's via Sudan.
@@FlanPoirot as far as I'm aware the classic 'eastern' overland route is ok.
Welcome
In 1980 I went to Sudan.
In those days you could get to Juba!
Also you could use the Nile steamers
In the 1950's a combination of of river and lake steamers along with a few short bus connections made it relatively easy.
A friend of mine father did the Journey in 1950.
The high point for him was the ship across Lake Albert the SS Robert Coryndon
Both Earnest Hemmingway and Sir Winston Churchill used her!
With the latter noting that she had "The Best Library Afloat!"
What about mentioning the gravy train?
Amazing work per usual 🤩
Great work here. i discovered your channel through Johnny Harris he shared this link on his community tab. it landed me here. i loved your works you story line is jhus amazing. being African what you talking about makes sense. we really need a inter continental transport route
Trip of a lifetime? Africa is huge. That trip seems like it would take a lifetime.
How is it an unfortunate thing to walk on the bridge by victoria falls? 04:54
That outro music is beautiful, sounds so Zimbabwean 🇿🇼🇿🇼🎶🎶
Groovy - Are you ganna do it - Cape to Cairo by train !! - I want to film it !!
I am going from Cairo to Khartoum mostly by rail in a few weeks. From Cairo to Aswan is easy as well as from wadi Halfa to Khartoum, just need to cross the lake Nubia by ferry and I know many people who have done that. I dont think the “gap” between Nairobi to Khartoum is that challenging if you are ok with taking buses and cars through Kenya, Ethiopia and Sudan. I plan to do it with other female African travellers like myself so if we can do it anyone can. You have to aware of safety of course but its doable.
This is so good
Driaan! Very awesome work, bud!
Dankie bra!
Does it count to have done Alexandria to Abu Simbel and then Cape to Khartoum all in the same year (2009)? No trains though, except one across northern Mozambique.
Most of that route is safe & one can easily drive by road from cape town to Addis Ababa. The road is also in good condition. The only issue is crossing from Ethiopia to Sudan into Egypt. But one can also travel through Uganda to Juba then into Khartoum direct to cape town.
Crossing from Ethiopia into Sudan and then Egypt isnt an issue either, there are highways connecting all of them. You just have to have the paperwork ready and plan accomidations of course.
Took the train from Cairo to Aswan in 2014. Take a spare towel that you would like to throw away. The first class seats were so black from grime it was tough to sit on for 20 odd hours. Hopefully they have changed the carriages because those haven't been cleaned in years.
Dope video. I’ve never been to Africa but I’m planning on doing an overland tour later this year
You ought to talk about the Hippie trail and how absurd it would be to try it today.
Very nice documentary 👌 👍 👏
You can travel by fail from cape town SA to Gulu. In Uganda by rail. Gulu is on the border of Uganda and South Sudan. Soin order to reach Cairo therefore you have only a short distance to cover i e South Sudan to.Egypt..
How long will the Cape-Cairo train journey take?
4 years 3 months & 2 weeks
With 15 million dead
I looovee your maps what software do you use for mapping
If we tell you, will you subscribe ;) J/K GEOlayers is what we use.
@@BrightTripTravel okk i will sub
Loving this
The contemporary Portuguese project : "pink map" / "mapa cor de rosa", that intended to connect Angola and Mozambique, Indic and South Atlantic, was a more realistic one. Unfortunately the two colonial powers collided resulting in the British ultimatum to Portugal and consequently the fall of the Portuguese monarchy. Something that is a stain in the oldest alliance between Portugal and England (Treaty of Windsor) .
Lova your content! I'm very interested in all things travel and exploring Africa. Been to Capetown x3 in the last 4 years. I would love to link up with you to explore movement across Africa for Africans. It's a shame Africans cannot enjoy Thier continent
Please do a video of cape town map explained
I have doen this up TO Dar but i did not go the Mozambique i did Botswana
Africa needs at least two to three rail network from South Africa to north Africa and Europe to enhance trade,tourism bwt the 2 continents. There is need for another separate three rail network from Middle East to connect Africa thereby enhancing spiritual tourism and trade. Both the lines would bring out the African landlocked Countries and at the same time reduce stresses on roads network in Africa.
I know someone who did it north to south in the seventies. Quite an adventure for a young woman by herself.
LOVED IT!
There is a passenger line between Nairobi and Nanyuki. Views of central Kenya and the snow peak of mount Kenya. It ends close to the middle of Kenya. Hopefully one day it will connect to Ethiopia.
Trains? 😅
I live in Nigeria and I'm pretty sure that trains basically don't work here at all.
I've only ever heard of someone taking a train once in my life and that was ten years ago, and he even said that the train stopped functioning a few months after his travel.
Sadly, Nobody here thinks about trains when they want to go anywhere
The Chinese have been building railways around Africa.
@@leef7872 doesn't change anything about what I said though
@@AmeenRidwan it wasn't supposed to change what you said. Its letting you know that what you said is going to change. The lack of modern infrastructure is going to be a thing of the past over the next couple decades
@@leef7872 if corruption doesn't get in the way too much, of course
Are you from Lagos? There is a direct train to Ibadan that is very reliable that I always use there is also the new train that was built from cms to badagry side
Why not Port Elizabeth to Tangier?
I thought there was some kind of rail from Nairobi to Kisumu?
Are you talking about the Meter Gauge Railway? If I remember correctly they're operating only freight.
@@ianhomerpura8937 why aren't they using it? Just rehabilitate and use a metre gauge, Malaysia does it.
The meter gauge rail is operational for both passengers and freight.
@@eacoincmubiru5894 thank you for the update. They have not updated the info on Wikipedia yet.
Very interesting...
You can get from nairobi to Ethiopia by road and its actually very easy and very good.
Nice video but You can actually make the cape to Cairo journey by Car 🚗 or bus 🚌 or motorcycle 🏍 or plane ✈️ many people have done it.
Corruption seems to be a problem everywhere
The train route I dream about every day is Mombasa to Lagos. There is a lot of trade opportunities to make it viable.
That makes sense. It would open up central and west africa
So the two gaps are basically a (relatively) small one between Tanzania and Kenya and then a larger one between Uganda and Sudan/Kenya and Sudan
You gonna do it?
Actually there train operating in Tanzania up to Arusha boder to Kenya.
Interesting 🤔
I thought a Cairo Lagos passenger-cum-freight rail link can make a lot of sense as it will shorten the journey between these 2 important economic centers in Africa.
But to transport wat exactly?🤔
Unfortunately the Zimbabwean trains are not running anymore ever since Covid. Only local trains from Harare are running, the four national lines are put on halt without a prospect of restart at the moment.
Beautiful videography regardless
Good video I like it
Super interesting 🚂 Africa needs accessible and SAFE public transport! How do I tag all the appropriate governments 😂?! I live here so no one come for me.
We already struggling with rail theft in South Africa
Tanzania is building a rail to rwanda burundi congo and uganda
If it was for cargo trains with multiple industrial complex around it then it would have been a great way for trade with in Africa right now it's a big pile of debt
Rhoades was like elon musk, In what world boy???
we need top of Africa to bottom of Africa all by buss route possible
Why you divide somalia and make part of ethopia?
Enkosi 🙏
People in Africa seem to be abandoned by explorers and left to DIY everything
Which people. Don't talk about Africa if you don't live in Africa nanii
I'm amazed at how many China built rails there are in the continent
The TAZARA being the first one.
You'd be more amazed to learn that the entire American railway system was built by the Chinese. Ironically they fail to mention that often 😂😂
Who else is here because of Johnny Harris
Progress in Africa is like progress made in a morbidly obese person’s weight loss journey. The difference in the 1st year is not especially noticeable because going from morbidly obese to slightly less morbidly obese would probably not be noticed by anyone except for those who see that person every day. The real difference comes after 1-4 years of weight loss and exercise. Turn those years to decades, and you get a similar story with Africa. It will likely be another 30 years before Africa looks anything like even the poorest of the EU’s members.
Who are here after Grand Tour finale?
Interesting how you can't cross the Americas by train, but you can kind of get most of Eastern Africa by train! 🧐
That's because the US government automobile industry actively fought against and sabotage the development of rail lines in most of Latin America during the 20th century
😂😂Yet the imbecile is talking as if every other continent is connected by Rail except Africa. Only Europe has a continental Railway system. Asia, the Americas & Africa don't.
Africa will never have an interconnected railway network. Due to historic reasons, they will be stuck with multiple networks of different gauges in different parts of africa. The southern third uses 1067mm gauge, whilt the states north to the sahara desert use standard gauge, and everything beween istn´t interconnected and are just seperate lines that use various different gauges. The chinese prefer to build with standard gauge.
They gonna steal the railway
I just came back from Zambia. Transport in Africa is a big problem and also a big business.
Trains are outdated and if they are going they are overcrowded with all kinds of people and animals.
The most common and acceptable way for foreigners is to travel in buses. You have the choice between a cheap mini-bus (26 people in a 14 seater!) or the more expensive travel buses which are way more comfortable than all the other options (except planes).
The question is not to get somewhere but much more how!
What you definitely need is time to do it. Africans don’t know anything about time! They have all the time of the world…
Entering Africa is a different universe where normal conditions don’t exist.
Take it or leave it, you cannot change anything there.
Looks like China has to come and build such route politicians can't even do tourism
It’s ironic the Germans could build a railway from Berlin Baghdad but Cecil could not Cairo to Cape Town
(Chancellor…………)
The continent of Africa has a bright future. There are new leaders arising with plans on bringing the continent together. Instead of a bunch of small countries a more united Africa. The colonizers divided Africa into a bunch of small countries to keep them from ever becoming a super power. In the past every time a new leader will step up with plans to Unite Africa, War breaks out and the Europeans are always involved. China has been building railways, ports, dams, power sects ,and other infrastructure. It's sad that the Europeans continue to prioritize Colonizing Africa. Throughout history all they did was destabilize. So far it seems china isn't getting involved in African relations and politics. Although that can always change.
How do europeans "prioritise colonisation"? They aren't colonising anyone in the modern day stop spreading blatant lies.
@@charlethemagne5466 Europeans still partake in Neo-colonialism
It seems like China is more interested in making more allies/trading partners than colonies (makes sense though China's geography and resources is amazing)
As a Pan-Africanist I do not appreciate how this guy portrays Africa.
While many TH-camrs are trying to promote the continent, I have no idea what the purpose of this video is.
There are ways you could have communicated the same message without painting Africa in such a bad light.
The only thing I like about this is the maps.
What is pan Africanism ?
@@avus-kw2f213 A political movement aimed to unite all or most of Africa into a single state
Not even South Africa can fix potholes. The rest of Africa has no chance.
Blame colonialism and proxy wars if you want but they are not the biggest problem by a long way.
Africa as the Last Continent to be developed suffers handicaps! Unfortunately!
So much potential!!
I sea border trafers in rail ways suck as much in Africa as they suck in Europe.
Trains are where it's at. Don't bother with stinky cars
It should be Cape to Alexandria
But it doesn't alliterate! 🙄 😆
Honestly good roads are there,.... We no longer use colonial infrastructure........
Johnny Harris 🙏
It is too bad that you can't use the pre- colonial infrastructure.
I'm sorry I have to give you a fail. You can't just say well. There's 3000 km that you can't do it so just get that far?? It's like saying I can walk from the United States to China but I have to walk on water in certain spots. Well that doesn't count.
it was a joke
The united nations building a highway? Wypipo to the rescue again