Ziguinchor (AFP) – A ferry service between Senegal’s capital and the isolated southern Casamance region has resumed to the joy and relief of many who said its months-long suspension had cost them dearly.
For the first time since June, passengers disembarked in the region’s capital, Ziguinchor, under the midday sun on Wednesday, after an overnight voyage along the Atlantic coast, mangroves and the banks of the Casamance River, under the escort of a military vessel.
The maritime link is vital for the economy of the rural and cut-off Casamance region and an alternative for many who can’t afford the cost of a plane ticket.
“We had really been deprived of our freedom and now we have regained our freedom,” 52-year-old Louis Bakourine, a driver, said at the docks as freight was unloaded from the ferry.
The service had been closed due to political unrest and the resumption coincided with celebrations marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan when many people return home.
“We are very, very happy because we suffered a lot during the nine months,” said Astou Sane, a nurse, as she boarded.
“We were travelling by road, with (all) the works. When you get there, you’ve got flu, you’re tired.”
Some 233 passengers embarked on the Aline Sitoe Diatta ferry which sounded its foghorn while departing the port of Dakar after dark, according to ferry terminal head Oumar Samb and AFP journalists.
The vessel was less than half full due to the short notice given for the service’s restoration, Samb said.
Ticket prices start at 5,000 CFA francs (7.6 euros, $8.3)
Alain Theophile Sane, a researcher in medical biology, said he’d booked a cabin.
“You can sleep during the journey. You arrive rested, all fresh.”
By road, the path is quite bumpy in places, you get there exhausted,” he said.
Authorities halted the ferry service last June without any official explanation, fuelling suspicions they just wanted to punish the region.
It followed deadly unrest in Ziguinchor and other cities, sparked by the conviction of former opposition politician and now prime minister Ousmane Sonko.
Sonko grew up in Casamance and two years ago became Ziguinchor’s mayor.
Popular and charismatic, he was barred from running in last month’s presidential election after a string of legal convictions which he condemned as politically motivated.
Instead, he backed his political ally who is now Senegal’s new President Bassirou Diomaye Faye.
– ‘Under embargo’ –
The maritime link, operated by three ships, has for years carried hundreds of passengers weekly between the capital and Casamance, several hundred kilometres (miles) to the south, in both directions.
The service is key for traders, tourists and students and also transports freight, fruit and fish.
Casamance is almost separated from the rest of Senegal by the tiny state of The Gambia.
More than 5,000 people signed a petition organised in October by the head of a processing company for agricultural products over the impact of the ferry’s suspension on jobs and income for thousands of families as well as on the price of goods.
Xavier Diatta said a large part of the mango crop had rotted and that producers of fish and cashew nuts also faced problems.
Pape Samba Cisse, a teacher, said on the pier that the ferry’s return would be greeted by all Casamance residents with a “sigh of relief”.
“We were put under embargo,” he said.
© 2024 AFP