“I feel proud to stick to my job on the railway artery”
By Harrison Kimani
I was born in the 1990s and became an
attendant for the Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) three years ago and
later a chief conductor.
I now serve at the dispatching center of
the railway operator, mainly responsible for dispatching the trains, monitoring
their operations and providing assistance in emergencies.
Contracted and built by China Road and
Bridge Corporation (CRBC), the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR is the first newly built
railway in Kenya in nearly a century.
As an important part of the standard-gauge
railway project in Kenya, the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR has greatly driven economic
and social development along the route since it opened on May 31, 2017.
In 2019, the average attendance rate of the
SGR passenger trains reached 95 percent. Besides, 16 freight trains run on a
daily basis along the railway, transporting six million tons of cargos.
Since the COVID-19 outbreak in Kenya,
the country has taken strict safety measures. Though the SGR suspended its passenger
service, it is still transporting freights, ferrying medical supplies and daily
necessities to different parts of Kenya.
To ensure orderly operation of the
railway and avoid the risk of infection during the commute, many Kenyan
employees volunteered to station at workplaces.
As the dispatching center is crucial to
the safe operation of the railway and has to be equipped with adequate
personnel, I also volunteered to stay.
The company has worked hard to ensure
the safety and health of the employees that chose to stay at workplaces, and
provided us with masks, gloves, hand sanitizer, goggles and other supplies. It was
really heartwarming and reassuring.
During this period of time, my
colleagues and I worked extra hours with a sense of duty.
Consilia, head of train drivers, got up
at 5 a.m. every day to take the temperature of on-duty drivers, made sure the
trains were disinfected and the employees wore masks and gloves and washed
hands.
I'm inspired by my colleagues’ devotion,
and feel proud to stick to my job on the railway artery during the pandemic.
Nearly 80 percent of the employees
working at the operator of the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR are from Kenya. The Chinese side
has shared experience in railway construction and operation with them and
helped them grasp and understand relevant skills and knowledge in a more
comprehensive and professional way, which helps facilitate the localization of
the company and the railway development in Kenya.
Recently, the Chinese side has doubled
its training courses for Kenyan employees to 16 every month and enabled each
employee to receive training for eight times every month, up from the original
four times.
As I once studied at Shandong Normal
University of China and could speak both fluent Mandarin and English, I
volunteered to be a translator in the training courses and benefited a lot from
the courses.
In recent years, China and Kenya have continuously
deepened cooperation in railway construction under the framework of the Belt
and Road Initiative (BRI).
The first phase of the Nairobi-Malaba SGR,
contracted by China Communications Construction, opened on October 16, 2019 and
I witnessed the precious moment on the first train departing.
As the extension of the Mombasa-Nairobi
SGR, the first phase of the railway linking Nairobi and Malaba has improved the
standard gauge railway network of Kenya and solidified the position of the
country as a regional transport and logistics hub.
I hope that railway will bring
prosperity and hope to every corner of Kenya after the pandemic ends.
(The
article is based on People’s Daily journalist Lyu Qiang’s interview with Harrison
Kimani, a Kenyan administrator at the dispatching center of the Mombasa-Nairobi
SGR operator.)
A Kenyan employee works along the Mombasa-Nairobi
standard gauge railway, May 13. (Photo provided by the Mombasa-Nairobi SGR
operator) |
No comments: