EUROPE AND AFRICA
of French West Africa. This will furnish the Upper Volta
with an outlet to the sea at only one half the distance of
Dakar and through a country whose products are suffi-
ciently different to stimulate local exchanges. There is
already an automobile road along this route, and here as
elsewhere in Africa the automobile is playing a considerable
part in the economic and political development of the
country. The Upper Volta, without railroads or direct
water transportation to the Coast, is at present largely
dependent for economical transportation and connection
with the outside world on its 2000 miles of automobile roads.
Dahomey’s chief railway runs from the port of Kotonu to
Savé (156 miles), whence an automobile road runs 310 miles
farther to the Niger River. In West Africa, however, a
large part of the roads classed as automobile roads are not
passable during the rainy season, but this disadvantage is
somewhat offset by the fact that the Upper Niger is navi-
gable at high water. Recently the Governor-General tra-
versed in twenty days approximately the course followed
by Captain Binger in eighteen months in 1887-89. Tim-
Suctu — though still a synonym for remoteness — may
now be reached by rail and steamer, and Zinder, the capital
of the vast inland Niger colony, may be reached by auto in
two days from the rail head at Kano in British N igeria.
Zinder has long been in telegraphic communication with
the other parts of West Africa, and Timbuctu and Bamaku
communicate with Paris by radio. Dakar, connected with
France by cable, wireless, and an airplane mail service
1925) has outgrown the plans of 1903 — criticized as over-
ambitious —and is embarking on another big program of
port development. In 1923 over 5,000,000 tons of shipping
entered its port, which is as much as entered any American
port except New York.
The commerce of West Africa has grown with the estab-
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