Click The New Vision - Uganda's Leading Website Nation Wide

Monday March 22, 2010 Discussion Board | Archive | Advertising | About Us | Staff | Contact Us  

THE NEW VISION |  BUKEDDE |  ORUMURI |  RUPINY |  ETOP |  SUNDAY VISION |  BUKEDDE KU SSANDE

FRONT PAGE
NATIONAL
EDITORIAL
LOCAL NORTH
LOCAL EAST
LOCAL WEST
LOCAL CENTRAL
COLUMNISTS
LETTERS
RASTOON
SPORT
LIFESTYLE
BUSINESS
MUSEVENI SPEECH
OPINION
WORLD CUP 2010
WOMAN
BUSINESS VISION
HEALTH AND BEAUTY
EDUCATION
ENVIRONMENT
WEEKEND
HAVE YOU HEARD
CRAZY WORLD
BOOKS AND ART
SCIENCE AND TECH
WEEKLY SPORTS RASTOON
RELATIONSHIPS
VISION STYLE
INTIMATE
GROOMING
ENTERTAINMENT
SOCIETY
HOMES
ESSENCE
TOTAL MAN
WOMAN ACHIEVER 2009
OUR COMMUNITY
WEDDINGS
COURT VERDICT
FROM MY HEART
ASK THE EXPERTS
TENDERS
NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTS
FOR SALE
JOBS NEW
Diesel shortage slows Bugiri road repairs
Thursday, 3rd May, 2007
E-mail article E-mail article   Print article Print article

By John Odyek

THE 84km Jinja-Bugiri road construction has been hampered by the diesel shortages. The contractors have written to the Government notifying it of the setback.

“Last week we were at a standstill for five days. We got some litres today and have resumed work,” Thomas Grave Hansen, the project manager, Reynold Construction Company, said on Wednesday.

“I have informed my employer (government) of the situation, that we are facing problems with diesel.”

The Nigeria-based company and Ghana’s SONITRA are jointly rehabilitating the road funded by the European Union at sh110b.

Construction started last July and is expected to end in December 2008. Hansen said about 10% of the work had been done.

He added that a dual carriageway between Jinja town and Kakira was being built.

Temporary repairs are expected to be done on the road to improve movement before it is tarmacked. Works minister Eng. John Nasasira recently said the road would be long-lasting.

“There are major complaints like maintenance of the road. It will be tarmacked and sealed to reduce dust and the rest will be completed later,” Nasasira noted.

Fuel scarcity that hit the country in mid-March has been attributed to problems on the Kenya oil pipeline. Uganda has negotiated with Kenya for her trains and trucks to load fuel directly from Mombasa.

But President Yoweri Museveni has blamed the Kenya Revenue Authority for demanding that Ugandan companies pay taxes in Mombasa instead of at the Uganda and Kenya border post of Malaba. The fuel companies fear double taxation.

The Promota
CURRENT LOCAL EAST STORIES
UNRA to build boreholes in Karamoja
Inmates accuse warders of torture
46-year-old man murders wife, commits suicide in Iganga
Govt to feed 6,000 victims
Companies win Jinja roads tenders
National Housing and Construction Company
UNRA
Uganda Canvas
© Copyright The New Vision 2000-2010. All rights reserved.