Khartoum - AFP
In a dilapidated, poverty-stricken country where some railwayrolling stock is more than 40 years old, Sudan's sleek, sharp-nosed Nile Train is anunusual sight.From a distance it looks like a large white snake gliding past fields of green nearthe Nile River north of Khartoum.On January 20 the train began daily passenger service -- Sudan's first in years -- aspart of efforts to revive the railway system despite an economic crisis that has leftthe country ravaged by inflation and starving for hard currency."This new train is really, really modern," says Ahmed Hussein, the project managerfor Sudan Railways Corporation.The four coaches roll out of the once-abandoned station in an industrial area ofNorth Khartoum at 9:00 am every day, heading north with two stops before reaching the railway junction town of Atbara.The journey of close to 300 kilometres (186 miles) takes six hours and 40 minutes.That is roughly twice as long as a bus but a lot quicker than the old trains servingSudan's other passenger rail destinations -- all two of them.The train to Nyala, in war-torn Darfur, goes every two weeks, while another makes aweekly trip north of Atbara to Wadi Halfa near the Egyptian border.Even though track conditions have restricted speeds of the Nile Train, it has provenso popular that in March the railway doubled its frequency to twice daily in the corridor which is already heavily-travelled by buses, transport trucks and privatecars.Hussein said every Nile Train service is almost full with an average passenger loadof around 284.Sudan bought two of the trains from China at a total cost of around $13 million,which is being paid over about four years, he said.- Safer than the bus -"I think most people travelling between Khartoum and Atbara will stop using busesand change to this new train," said Hannah Ali Mohammed, 35, marvelling at how,unlike older trains, the air-conditioned coaches kept her clothes free of desert dustduring the trip to North Khartoum.A student, Ahmed Al-Haj Omer, 23, said it was his first time riding the rails. "I enjoyed it," he said. "It's safer. There are a lot of bus accidents on the roadbetween Khartoum and Atbara." A bus ticket also costs about 50 percent more than the 51-pound ($6) train trip.Hassan Abdulmajid, 52, said he has already used the Nile Train four times and hopesother parts of the country will get a similar service.That is the plan, says Hussein, but the first obstacle to overcome is the track."Unfortunately, we have only one track," meaning freight and passenger servicesshare the same narrow-gauge rails, although the company is doing its best toupgrade what they have, he said.Sudanese and Chinese firms have been replacing wooden railway ties with concreteon the Khartoum-Atbara line, while track work has also started between Atbara andthe trade centre of Port Sudan, he said.Rehabilitation of the line to Wad Medani, in Sudan’s once-thriving agriculturalheartland, will follow soon, Hussein said.After that, service by modern coaches like the Nile Train can be expanded.This was part of former general manager Makawi Mohammed Awad's vision forrestoring the railway, employees say.In December, Awad was named to the cabinet where he is minister of oil.The Khartoum-Atbara route formed part of the main line to Port Sudan and datesfrom 1898, the year before Britain and Egypt began to jointly administer Sudan, therailway's website says."It played a very important role in unifying the country," said veteran newspapercolumnist Mahjoub Mohamed Salih, who hasn't used the railway in about 30 years.An efficient rail system would be an asset for the country which has been desperatefor hard currency since the loss of about 75 percent of its oil production when SouthSudan separated in 2011."It will remain that railways are the cheapest system for your exports," Salih said- A railway morgue -Lack of money played a role in the railway's decline but so did political factors,according to the columnist, who said the government of President Omar al-Bashir,fearing labour unrest, dismissed thousands of skilled railway employees in the1990s.Khartoum has been under a United States trade embargo since 1997, and MohamedOro Saliem Mohamed, the railway's locomotive and rolling stock manager, says allof Sudan's American-made engines are idle because of a parts shortage.Others are still able to pull 20-25 freight trains around the country daily, he says,adding with a slight chuckle that some are very old."Some of them, 1970. Some of them, 1960... but rehabilitated."Many of the roughly 49 functional locomotives have been purchased in recent years from China, and five more are on the way, Mohamed says.Decaying grey and yellow coaches from decades past lie abandoned behind hiscentral Khartoum railway headquarters.It is a railway morgue, but alongside the corpses are signs of life.In recent months a new dirt road has been built into the site where pedestrians usedto wander freely. A fence has gone up, and Sudanese workers hammer away atsevered pieces of track. A backhoe digs, and a Chinese technician has set up hissurveying tool on a tripod.Train horns are heard more frequently in the city.For newspaper columnist Salih the Nile Train and accompanying improvements area small step "but not much". "I think the collapse of Sudan Railways is total, and partial rehabilitation will notdo," he said."But they have to start somewhere.