Ruto, Museveni meet for rail link
Nyanza
By
AFP
| Mar 21, 2026
The presidents of Kenya and Uganda met near their shared border Saturday to mark the multi-billion-dollar, long-delayed extension of a Chinese-built railway that has left Kenya heavily in debt.
The Standard Gauge Railway, built from 2013 to 2019, connects the Kenyan port of Mombasa to its capital, Nairobi, and on to the lake town of Naivasha. Still, China refused further lending before it could be extended to Uganda as planned.
Kenya now spends roughly $1 billion a year servicing Chinese debt, most of it borrowed to build the railway.
That is far more than the line generates in revenue, around $165 million last year, despite passenger and cargo numbers growing strongly over the past year.
A report by Kenya's auditor general last year found more than $260 million had been wasted just on penalties and interest from late debt payments.
READ MORE
KCB shareholders approve Sh22.5b dividend payout
National Bank reports 275pc jump in Q1 profit
New push to increase funding for research and development
Kenya positioned as Africa's next AI innovation hub
Chaka's housing boom bets on investors' demand for city-style
New coating system looks to spruce up Kenya's construction finishes
Court declines to fast-track petition against EPRA fuel prices
Govt moves to close Sh56bn rice import gap with irrigation push
Changing face of Nairobi's downtown as investors splash billions on new skyscrapers
Yet despite the controversy over the cost, Kenya has been keen to finish the line.
President William Ruto broke ground on the next phase in Narok County on Thursday, arguing that it will "catalyse regional economic growth, and firmly position Kenya as a leading transport and logistics hub in eastern and central Africa", while creating jobs and reducing road congestion.
"We have thought through this project (and)... its finance," he insisted.
Ruto met his Ugandan counterpart, Yoweri Museveni, in Kisumu near the Kenya-Uganda border, where the line is due to reach by June 2027 if the ambitious building schedule is to be believed.
The next phase will then take the line to Malaba, a town on the border.
Treasury estimates say the overall cost will be more than 500 billion shillings ($3.9 billion), according to Kenya's Business Daily.
Kenya is not taking more cash from Chinese banks this time -- instead borrowing against future cargo taxes -- though it is partnering with Chinese transport firms to build the new phase.
China lent Kenya $9.7 billion between 2000 and 2019, according to the Chinese Loans to Africa Database by Boston University, with around half of that going to the railway.
It stopped lending from 2020 to 2023 as Kenya struggled to make repayments, at a time when China revised its broader lending strategy to Africa.
Kenya considers the railway extension crucial for strengthening trade through east and central Africa, hoping to reach landlocked countries such as Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, and the mineral-rich Democratic Republic of Congo.