Neha Patil (Editor)

MV Ilala

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Name
  
MV Ilala II

Port of registry
  
Yard number
  
1917

Launched
  
1949

Tonnage
  
562,500 kg

Operator
  
Malawi Lake Services

Route
  
Completed
  
1951

Length
  
52 m

MV Ilala The Scottish boat that helps feed Malawi BBC News

Mv ilala lake malawi april 2014


MV Ilala, formally Ilala II, is a motor ship that has plied Lake Malawi in East Africa since 1951. She is operated by Malawi Lake Services and based in Monkey Bay, Malawi (on the southern end of the lake); every week she crosses the lake all the way north to Chilumba, Malawi, near Tanzania (about 300 miles (480 km) from Monkey Bay) and then returns to Monkey Bay. She carries both passengers and freight, and calls at major towns on both the Malawian and Mozambican coast, as well as at the two inhabited islands of the lake (Likoma and Chizumulu). While the ship is often late (reportedly by as much as 24 hours or more) and has sometimes broken down she remains the most important means of long-distance transport for the people living on the coast of the lake. She is 172 feet (52 m) long overall, has a gross tonnage of 620 tons and can accommodate up to 365 passengers and 100 tons of cargo.

Contents

MV Ilala The ship from Scotland helping feed Malawians MV Ilala The Times

History

MV Ilala Narrow escape for MV Ilala The Nation Online

Yarrow Shipbuilders at Scotstoun near Glasgow, Scotland built Ilala for Nyasaland Railways in 1949. As she was the second boat to be built for service on Lake Malawi (the first being built in 1875 at Poplar), and her predecessor was called Ilala, the ship was formally named Ilala II, but she is now commonly called just Ilala and this is also how the name is painted on the hull. In turn, the first Ilala was named after the Ilala region of Zambia, where David Livingstone was first buried.

MV Ilala MV Ilala arriving at Ruarwe on Lake Malawi Jerry Kent Flickr

Once built, the ship was dismantled and transported to Malawi (then Nyasaland) in pieces, first by ship to Mozambique and then from Beira, Mozambique by rail and road to Chipoka. She began operating in 1951, and has run continuously since then, except for periods of maintenance. She also survived several groundings. Some steel panels have been repaired over time, and she was re-engined in the 1990s. When Ilala has been out of service for maintenance, she was usually replaced by a companion, newer ferry called MV Mtendere (which means "peace" in Chewa), which otherwise only cruises the southern part of the lake.

MV Ilala httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

As the ship does not meet current international requirements for passenger ships, there are plans to build a replacement.

Route

MV Ilala MV Ilala a photo from Nkhata Bay North TrekEarth

The MV Ilala weekly calls at the following places (they are visited in this order when the boat is going north, and in the inverse order when the boat goes back south):

  • Monkey Bay, Malawi
  • Chipoka, Malawi
  • Nkhotakota, Malawi
  • Metangula, Mozambique
  • Cobue, Mozamibique
  • Likoma Island, Malawi
  • Chizumulu Island, Malawi
  • Nkhata Bay, Malawi
  • Usisya, Malawi
  • Ruarwe, Malawi
  • Ncharo, Malawi
  • Chilumba, Malawi

  • MV Ilala BBC World Service Focus On Africa Magazine Malawi Sixty years

    In the past, the ship used to reach farther north to Karonga and the short strip of the northern coast of the lake belonging to Tanzania, but this route has been discontinued.

    References

    MV Ilala Wikipedia