As
Nuimi residents seek Allah’s help
The
current state of the ferry services at the Banjul-Barra crossing point is
getting from bad to worse as the ferries that usually ply the distance for 30
to 45 minutes now spend two to three hours or more.
![]() |
| Elders praying for Allah's help to resolve the ferry crisis |
The
people of Niumi, specifically in Essau village, are now seeking spiritual help
from Allah to resolve the seemingly insolvable problems at the Banjul-Barra
ferry crossing point.
At
most gathering of the elders – be it religious or social – the elders now pray
for Allah’s help as though all human efforts have been employed but solution
could not be found to the perennial problems.
On
Saturday during the one-year charity of the late Alhaji Kebba Marong, who was
the muezzin of one of the mosques in Essau, shortly after recitation of Quran
for the deceased, one of the village elders said: “Let us do another ‘duwa’, supplication, so
that Allah can help in bringing normalcy and safety at the crossing point,
Banjul-Barra, because the situation there is not very good.”
Without
hesitation, the elders stretched their hands to God seeking His intervention in
the ferry services.
“Please
let us add more, I almost cross every week to Banjul. I came from Banjul just yesterday (Saturday),
the ferry departed Banjul around 2pm and we only arrived after 5pm,” one of the
elders lamented.
The
current state of the ferry services at the Banjul-Barra crossing point is
getting from bad to worse as the ferries that usually ply the distance for 30
to 45 minutes now spend two to three hours or more.
Often
times now, the ferries even get breakdown in the river and could be there for
hours without reaching the other bank of the river.
It
is understood that the engines of all the three ferries are not in good state.
The
state of ferry crossing is becoming more and more terrible by the day as the
conditions of the ferries, if anything, is deteriorating rapidly.
At
the crossing point in Barra terminal on Sunday, Maram Jobe said they spent four
hours at the said terminal before the arrival of the Kanilai Ferry from Banjul.
According
to Modou Jallow, a commuter, he arrived at the terminal at 6:00pm and
could not get a ferry up to 8:00pm when he boarded the Kanilai Ferry.
The
time waiting for the ferry is different from other hours that it takes for the
ferry to ply from Banjul to Barra.
Passengers
resort to risky transport boats
Many
people have now resorted to crossing by boat due to the continuous failing and
deteriorating ferry services.
In
the same vein, boat operators have also irrationally increased the fare from
D15 to D25.
Also,
people who carry passengers in and out of the boat have also increased the cost
of carrying each passenger from D5 to D10.
Now
the entire cost of crossing by boat which used to be D25 (D15 for boat fare, D5
to the porter carrying a passenger to the boat, and another D5 to the one
taking the passenger out) is now D45 (that is, D25 for boat fare, D10 to the
one carrying the passenger to the boat and another D10 to the one out).
