President Jakaya Kikwete has said Tanzania will never quit the East African Community. PHOTO|FILE
DODOMA: Tanzania will never
quit the East African Community and will do everything in its power to
make sure the community survives and becomes prosperous despite efforts
by Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda to side-line it, President Jakaya Kikwete
told the Parliament Thursday.
“We are in the EAC to
stay. We have come from so far. We have sacrificed so much to give up
now. We will do everything in our power to make sure the EAC survives
and achieve its ultimate goal of political federation,” President
Kikwete told the Parilament with President of Zanzibar Dr Ali Mohammed
Shein, Vice President Dr Ghalib Bilali, Prime Minister Mizengo Pinda and
Chief Justice Othman Chande in attendance.
Mr Kikwete
who is just back from meetings in South Africa where he met Presidents
Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya and Yoweri Museveni of Uganda said he has
started engaging his counterparts to find out exactly what the problem
is and try to improve relations.
He said allegations
that Tanzania was an impediment in the integration were not true despite
the fact that they have been repeated several times.
“Tanzania is an active participant in the integration process and is fulfilling its part of the bargain,” he said.
But
he added that Tanzania will not agree to fast racking the political
federation by jumping other key integration processes such as the
Monetary Union.
Speaking with an intensity rarely seen
on the ever smiling President, Mr Kikwete told a fully packed House that
he was, however, highly puzzled and deeply saddened by efforts to
sideline Tanzania even in issues that have all along been discussed at
the level of the EAC summit meetings.
He said he was asking himself countless questions on why Tanzania is being side-lined.
“Is
there a conspiracy to push Tanzania out of the EAC? Is it that my
counterparts from Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda hate me personally? It is
difficult to even imagine the answers,” President Kikwete said.
He said Tanzania had every reason to ask what has happened.
“We
met in April 28 this year at summit in Arusha. Two months later they
meet again alone to discuss how to implement the same issues that we
discussed in April, and without inviting me. This is a sign to isolate
Tanzania. How can we integrate through isolation?” he wondered.
Mr
Kikwete’s reaction comes after Presidents Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya,
Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Paul Kagame of Rwanda held a series of
three meetings this year, the latest being October 28 in Kigali where
they discussed and agreed to start the implementation several issues
including infrastructure projects, the political federation and the
single customs territory.
President Kikwete affirmed that he has never been invited in the three tripartite meetings.
“They
call the tripartite ‘the coalition of the willing’. My question is
‘who, then, is not willing in the EAC integration process?’ Why don’t
they invite us and see if we are willing or not?” Mr Kikwete asked.
Kikwete
said he is of the view that Tanzania is being sidelined because of its
avowed stand on the political federation, land, immigration and movement
of labour.
“I might be wrong, but my guess is that we
are being sideline because we insist that we should not jump key
integration steps such as the Monetary Union for the political
federation. But in this and all other issues we have the EAC Protocol to
back us,” he noted.
He said despite the fact that two
or more countries are allowed to meet over bilateral or trilateral
issues they are allowed to do so only to discuss issues that are not in
the EAC protocol or which have not been decided upon in the EAC Summit
meetings.
They can also decide to meet and decide on
taking over implementation of issues agreed upon by the EAC only after
permission from the secretariat, Kikwete said.
“However
the ‘coalition of the willing’ has met and deliberated on issues under
the auspice of EAC integration. These include the political federation
and the single customs territory,” noted Kikwete.
Despite the fact that the three countries can go forward with the
infrastructure projects without Tanzania the decision to sideline the
country was against the spirit of the integration since Tanzania had
shown interest in participating in all the projects being undertaken.
It
was expected that the Mombasa-Kampala-Kigali standard gauge railway
line would branch to Tanzania; the Eldoret-Kampala-Kigali oil pipeline
would branch to Mwanza; Tanzania was invited, and in fact wanted, to
invest in the Uganda oil refinery; the electricity issue was agreed
together through the EAC Power pool project.
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