BBC reports that the first cargo ships have passed through Egypt's second
Suez Canal, amid tight security, ahead of the new waterway's official opening
next month. Construction on the new lane, which runs alongside part of
the existing canal, started less than a year ago. The 72km (44 mile) route
allows two-way traffic and can accommodate larger vessels. Reports suggest that
several container ships from around the world successfully navigated it on
Saturday as part of a trial run. Helicopters and naval vessels escorted the
ships as part of the security operation.
The Sinai Peninsula, which
borders the canal, is a base for Islamic militants, who have killed hundreds of
people since the military overthrew President Mohammed Morsi in 2013. The New Suez Canal is the name of a waterway
project in Egypt, expanding the existing Suez Canal between the Mediterranean
Sea and the Red Sea. It was launched simultaneously with plans to build six new
tunnels under the canal and to transform a 76,000 km2 area on both banks of the
canal into an international logistics, commercial and industrial hub that would
"create one million jobs".
The enlarged canal
will allow ships to sail in both directions at the same time over much of the
canal's length. This is expected to decrease waiting hours from 11 to 3 hours
for most ships and to double the capacity of the Suez Canal from 49 to 97 ships
a day. Works across the news 72 km canal
involves dry digging, expansion and deep digging. Six new tunnels for cars and trains are also
planned to end the isolation of the Sinai peninsula, connecting it better to
the Egyptian heartland. The construction
of the new canal itself was initially scheduled to take five years. It was then
first reduced to three years and finally ordered by President Abdel Fattah
el-Sisi to be completed in one year only.
Now according to
media reports, the container ships passed through Egypt's New Suez Canal on
Saturday in a test-run before it opens next month, state media reported, 11
months after the army began constructing the $8 billion canal alongside the
existing 145-year-old Suez Canal. The new waterway, which President Abdel
Fattah al-Sisi hopes will help expand trade along the fastest shipping route
between Europe and Asia, will be formally inaugurated on Aug. 6. Sisi wants the
canal to become a symbol of national pride and to help combat Egypt's
double-digit unemployment. The old Suez Canal is already a vital source of hard
currency for Egypt, which has seen tourism and foreign investment drain away in
the years of turmoil since a 2011 uprising.
Three
container ships crossed the new waterway, state news agency MENA reported. One
was an American ship heading to Egypt's Port Said from Saudi Arabia, another
was a Danish ship sailing to the United States from Singapore, and a Bahraini
ship going to Italy from Saudi Arabia.
Egypt deserves all praise for their innovative thinking and execution in
such a short period.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
26th July 2015-07-26
Photo credit : BBC
