Congo–Ocean Railway

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Congo-Ocean Railway line
Overview
StatusOperational
Locale
Pointe Noire
  • Brazzaville
  • Stations49
    Service
    SystemNon-Electrified
    ServicesVia Dolisie
    History
    Opened1934
    Technical
    Line length512 km (318 mi)
    Number of tracks1
    CharacterAt-grade
    Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
    ElectrificationNo
    Operating speed40 kilometres per hour (25 mph)
    Route map

    The Congo–Ocean Railway (COR;

    Oubangui River to Bangui
    .

    As of 2012[update] the railroad was regularly operating freight and passenger services along the length of the line despite the poor state of the track.

    La Gazelle, using Korean-manufactured passenger cars, was introduced in 2012; as of 2014 it operated between Pointe-Noire and Brazzaville every other day, and was scheduled to take 14–16 hours to complete the 502 kilometres (312 mi) journey.[2]

    History

    Mayumbe cutting, 1930
    Forced labour family camp, located near Les Saras, during construction in 1930
    Brazzaville station, 1932

    Under French colonial administration, in 1921 they contracted Société de Construction des Batignolles to construct the railway using forced labour, recruited from what is now southern Chad and the Central African Republic. Like Spain and Portugal, France did not ratify the International Labour Organization Forced Labour Convention of 1930, No. 29.[3] Disdain among the native population towards this conscripted labour and other forms of oppression led to the Kongo-Wara rebellion between 1928 and 1931.[4] Through the period of construction until 1934 there was a continual heavy cost in human lives, with total deaths estimated in excess of 17,000 of the construction workers, from a combination of both industrial accidents and diseases including malaria.[5] In 1946, France ratified the Forced Labour Convention, in light of a permanent state of emergency, due to indigenous revolt.

    In 1962, a branch was constructed to Mbinda near the border with Gabon, to connect with the COMILOG Cableway and thus carry manganese ore to Pointe-Noire. The Cableway closed in 1986 when neighbouring Gabon built its own railway to haul this traffic. The branch line remains active nonetheless.

    The Congo–Ocean Railway was a user of the Golwé locomotive. Motive power is now provided by diesel locomotives.

    From the start of the

    civil war in 1997, the line was closed for six years.[citation needed
    ]

    Operations restarted in 2004, but in August 2007

    Ouesso and Djambala mainly for timber traffic.[7]

    On 21 June 2010, a train of the Congo–Ocean Railroad was involved in a major accident, in which at least 60 people were killed. The train is believed to have derailed as it went round a curve in a remote area between Bilinga and Tchitondi, throwing four carriages into a ravine. The dead and wounded were taken to hospitals and morgues in Pointe-Noire.

    In 2011, it was announced that Africa Iron was close to concluding a 25-year ore transport deal with Congo–Ocean.[8] In early 2015 the Congo–Ocean Railway purchased 10 EMD GT38AC locomotives from Electro-Motive Diesel in Muncie, Indiana. They were put into service by the summer of 2015.[9]

    In 2021 a proposal was announced for a

    Mayoko & Niari - Pointe-Noire railway for iron ore traffic.[10]

    Stations served

    Congo–Ocean Railway
    Chemin de fer Congo-Océan
    Technical
    Line length512 km / 318 mi
    Track gauge1067 mm / 3 ft 6 in
    Route map

    512 km
    Brazzaville
    Kikembo
    Ngoma-Tse-Tse
    Mayogongo
    Kibouende
    Ngabouloumou
    Madza
    Matoumbou
    Loualou
    Massembo-Loubaki
    Missafou
    Mindouli
    Kingoyi
    Kikembo
    Loulombo
    Kimbedi
    Loutété
    Bouansa
    Kipambou-Kayes
    Madingou
    Kimbaouka
    Bodissa
    Nkayi
    Moutela
    Loudima
    285 km
    Mbinda
    (Comilog-Line)
    0 km
    ? km
    Mont Bélo
    Moubotsi
    Tao-Tao
    ? km
    91 km
    Loubomo (Dolisie)
    Moukondo
    Mvouti
    Mpounga
    Malemba
    Les Saras
    Mfoubou
    Mvoungouti
    Nzombo
    Tsessi
    Tsoumbou
    Nemba
    Nkougni
    ? km
    0 km
    Bilinga
    Yanga
    Mboukou
    Makola
    Hinda
    Ntombo
    Ngondji
    0 km
    Pointe-Noire
    COMILOG-Line
    Technical
    Line length285 km / 177 mi
    Track gauge1067 mm / 3 ft 6 in
    Route map

    285 km
    Mbinda
    Ngongo
    Mayoko
    Tsinguidi
    Mbaka
    Vouka
    Nzima
    Moungoundou
    Moutebe
    Mossendjo
    Boungoto
    Massanga
    Tsimba
    Itsotso
    Titi
    Mabafi
    Mahitoula
    106 km
    PK 106
    Boudanga
    Makabana
    Moukanga
    Diesse
    Sinda
    Mouindi
    Kibouba
    512 km
    Brazzaville
    Loutété
    (Congo-Ocean)
    0 km
     
    Mont Bélo
    0 km
    Pointe-Noire
    1 m[11]

    Specifications

    The line includes the 1,690-metre (1,850 yd) Bamba tunnel and 14 large reinforced concrete viaducts. The steepest eastbound gradients are 1 in 67 (1.5%), the steepest westbound 1 in 50 (2.0%). The initial locomotives were 2-8-2 tender and articulated tank engines with six driving axles. There were also 2 4-wheel petrol cars for engineers and an 18-passenger Micheline and another Micheline for the Governor General.[12]

    Operations

    The COR is a state-owned enterprise whose privatization was planned as part of the commitments made by the Congolese government to the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Among the candidates were several consortia, including Congo-Rail (Bolloré Investments, Maersk, SNCF), and the South African consortium Sheltam Mvela.

    Railway links to adjacent countries

    • Democratic Republic of the Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo – no – same gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) – proposed road-rail bridge.[14]
    • Angola Angola (Cabinda) – no lines in Cabinda – same gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) as mainland Angola
    • Gabon Gabon – no – break of gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)/1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
    • Cameroon Cameroon – no – break of gauge 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)/1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
    • Central African Republic Central African Republic – no – no railways

    Cities served by rail

    In the media

    In 2012 the Congo–Ocean Railway was featured in an episode of the television series Chris Tarrant: Extreme Railways.[1]

    See also

    References

    1. ^ a b "Extreme Railways: Congos Jungle Railway". 2012 – via YouTube.[dead YouTube link]
    2. ^ "2014 Timetable". Lonely Planet.
    3. ^ "ILO Forced Labour Convention, 1930 (No. 29)". Archived from the original on 5 December 2011. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
    4. ^ "Republic of Congo profile: Timeline". BBC News. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
    5. ^ "In pictures: Malaria train, Mayomba forest". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
    6. ^ "In pictures: Malaria train, Train engine". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
    7. ^ "Korea to build railroad in Congo". Korean Consortium. Archived from the original on 25 October 2008. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
    8. ^ "Railway Gazette: News in Brief". 16 April 2011. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
    9. ^ Denton, Paul (2015). "Locos For All Conditions". Railway Gazette International. 171 (6): 50.
    10. ^ "New US$ 1bn Mayoko to Pointe-Noire port railway project in Congo underway". 16 July 2021.
    11. ^ a b "map". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
    12. ^ "Railway Magazine". June 1936: 400. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
    13. ^ a b c Jane's World Railways (69/70 ed.). pp. 542–543.
    14. ^ DRCongo-RCongo

    Further reading

    External links

    External videos
    YouTube video clips
    video icon [1], 9 May 2017; 45:06; Chris Tarrant Extreme Railways S01E01 – Congo
    • Media related to Chemin de fer Congo–Océan at Wikimedia Commons
    • A 2021 book, In the Forest of No Joy: The Congo-Océan Railroad and the Tragedy of French Colonialism by J. P. Daughton (Norton, 384 pp), describes the gruesome toll taken on the African laborers who built the railroad in the 1920s and 30s. A brief review in The New Yorker notes that although the project "was championed as key to local development," over 20 000 of them "perished of starvation, disease, or physical abuse. Mostly forced laborers, they toiled without machinery, clearing forests by hand and turning rocks into gravel with hammers."[1] Publisher: https://wwnorton.com/books/9780393541014
    • Official website

    Maps

    1. ^ "Briefly Noted: In the Forest of No Joy". The New Yorker. 30 August 2021. p. 73.