Uganda Railway steamers The original ships serving the
Uganda Railway were built in the
United Kingdom as "knock down" ships; that is, they were bolted together, all the parts marked with numbers, disassembled into thousands of parts, transported in kit form by sea to
Mombasa and by railway to Kisumu and reassembled. was built for the
Imperial British East Africa Company in 1890 by
Bow, McLachlan and Company at
Paisley in
Scotland but not launched at Kisumu until 1900. In the
First World War, she was armed as a
gunboat.
Winifred was launched on the lake in 1902 She served on the lake from 1907 to 1935. She was reported to be laid up as of 2007. is a
tugboat built by Bow, McLachlan & Co in 1912 and launched at Kisumu in 1913. During the First World War, she served as a gunboat. They were
troop ships during the First World War East African Campaign and passed into civilian service after the
Armistice. EAR&H withdrew
Rusinga for scrap in 1966, but she passed into private ownership and in 2005 was still in service.
Usoga was laid up in 1975, sank at her moorings at Kisumu in the 1990s, and as of 2006 her remains were still there. In the 1980s,
Buvuma was laid up and sank at her jetty.
East African Railways and Harbours motor vessels RMS Victoria was built in 1959 by
Yarrow Shipbuilders at
Scotstoun and reassembled for the
East African Railways and Harbours Corporation (EAR&H) ship at Kisumu in 1961. When the ship was commissioned,
Queen Elizabeth II granted her the "
Royal Mail Ship" designation: the only EAR&H ship to receive this distinction. Kenya operated
Uhuru, but she has been suspended from service since 2007. By 1970, the
East African Railways and Harbours Corporation operated regular sailings clockwise around the lake from Kisumu, using rail ferries that carried rail wagons loaded directly from rail tracks extended on the jetties at Kisumu, Port Bell and Mwanza. The rail network linked to the
Indian Ocean ports of
Mombasa and
Dar es Salaam which allowed countries of the African interior such as Uganda and
Rwanda to transport freight to and from world markets. Typical journey times were 13 hours between Port Bell in Uganda and Kisumu in Kenya, and 19 hours between Port Bell and Mwanza in Tanzania. In 1977 EARH was dissolved and its assets divided between Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda.
Uhuru was transferred to the new
Kenya Railways Corporation (KRC) and
Umoja and
Victoria to the new
Tanzania Railways Corporation (TRC). In 1978, the new
Uganda Railways Corporation (URC) purchased three train ferries from Belgium, MV
Pemba, MV
Kaawa and MV
Kabalega. However their production was interrupted by the war between Uganda and Tanzania that broke out in October 1978 and ended in April 1979. The ferries were assembled after the war at Port Bell and launched in 1983. TRC's Marine Division introduced the ferry in about 1979 and the passenger and
cargo ship in 1988. In 1997, the Marine Division of TRC became a separate company, the
Marine Services Company Limited, whose fleet includes
Serengeti,
Umoja, and
Victoria.
21st century vessels and operations Early in the 21st century, new Lake Victoria ro-ro ferries were constructed at Mwanza port in Tanzania, in particular through the family-owned and local
Songoro Marine Transport Ltd in Tanzania. This added some dynamics to the ferry services sector on Lake Victoria and allowed several private companies to own and/or to operate new ferries, for example the Nyehunge ferries by Mohammed Seif, the owner of
Nyehunge IT Support Ltd. In 2005, Tanzania founded a new state-owned enterprise,
Tanzania Electrical, Mechanical and Electronics Services Agency (TEMESA), which received more than a dozen new and locally built and state-owned ro-ro ferries on Lake Victoria to operate them. Also in 2005, the private
Rift Valley Railways Consortium (RVR) was selected by the two parastatal railway corporations in Kenya (KRC) and Uganda (URC) to operate their joint railway network from 2006 on. RVR also took over the three remaining Lake Victoria train ferries of Uganda and Kenya (
Kabalega sank in 2005),
Pemba,
Uhuru and
Kaawa. RVR suspended
Pemba and
Kaawa from service indefinitely and also stopped
Uhuru from all operations in 2007 after the railway branch line of the Uganda Railway between Kisumu and
Nakuru dropped out of operations due to an aging railway infrastructure. The Lake Victoria railheads in Port Bell, Jinja and Kisumu, then also operated by RVR, went out of operation. The remaining Tanzanian train ferry, MV
Umoja could only serve Tanzanian rail jetties and became almost suspended as well and was used for special purposes only. Except from the Tanzanian ferry business, which started to flourish due to the new ferries built and put into operation, the Ugandan and Kenyan ferry business on Lake Victoria appeared to be dilapidated. In May 2008, the
Daily Monitor stated that it expected the Ugandan government to announce in that year's budget speech a government allocation of
USh 14 billion to buy a new train ferry to replace
Kabalega. However, in September 2009, the Uganda Radio Network said the Ugandan government was unlikely to replace
Kabalega soon. Instead, the Minister of Works proposed to improve port facilities at
Jinja and Port Bell and let private operators run railway
car floats with greater capacity than the ferries. However, except words, no activities followed the announcements. In 2010, new international passenger ferry services based on
catamarans were to be launched. A US based company, Earthwise Ventures, announced that it would bring a fleet of fast ferries to Lake Victoria to connect major ports on the lake. Later on, the private Earthwise Ferries Ltd with branches in Tanzania and Uganda started to operate the first catamaran passenger ferry on Lake Victoria in 2012, the MV
Amani at Port Bell in Uganda, followed by a sister ship in 2018, the
Bluebird at Mwanza port in Tanzania. Also in 2010, a Scottish investor, Malcolm Ormiston, founded
Globology Ltd in Kisumu, Kenya to build and to operate smaller catamaran passenger ferries to operate on Lake Victoria in Kenya and in Uganda under the brand name
Waterbus East Africa. A first small and locally built catamaran,
Captain Dan went into operation in 2010. In 2017, Globology intended to start to build 3-5 catamaran passenger ferries per year each with a capacity to transport 120 passengers. As of April 2013, only
Tanzania Railways' Central Line was operating freight rail services from Mwanza to
Tabora,
Dodoma and Dar es Salaam and therefore connecting the Lake Victoria freight services with the world market. In 2017, the contract with RVR was cancelled in both Kenya and Uganda due to financial irregularities, both KRC and URC restarted the operations on their respective railway networks. URC also restarted the services at the railhead in Port Bell, the train ferry
Kaawa was repaired and refurbished and put back into operation. In a similar manner, the train ferry
Umoja on the Tanzanian side was repaired and refurbished. In June 2018, the
EastAfrican reported that 1180-tonne
Umoja began regular service again between Mwanza and Port Bell, plying the route 26 times every month. It is also expected that
Kaawa, registered in Uganda, will join
Umoja on the route. The
Dar es Salaam to Kampala route costs US$65 per tonne, compared to US$90 per tonne on the
Mombasa to
Kampala route, as of June 2018.{{cite web| url=https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/business/Tanzania-unveils-cargo-train-to-Uganda/2560-4654108-y39fkaz/index.html | title=Tanzania unveils cargo train to Uganda |access-date=10 July 2018 |date=9 July 2018 |newspaper=
The EastAfrican |last=Tairo ==Incidents and accidents==