Cabinet Secretary for East African Affairs, Commerce and Tourism Phyllis
Kandie, leads the delegation of ministers and business leaders from the
East African Community (EAC) in talks to foster business between East
Africa and the European Union resume today in Brussels, Belgium.
PHOTO/SALATON NJAU
Talks to foster business between East Africa and the European Union resume today in Brussels, Belgium.
The
delegation of ministers and business leaders from the East African
Community (EAC) will be headed by Kenyan Commerce and Tourism cabinet
secretary Phylis Kandie.
Ms Kandie who also chairs the
EAC council of ministers will lead the discussions on the Economic
Partnership Agreements (EPAs) which are considered crucial to the
region’s economic growth.
The negotiations will go on until Thursday and they are aimed at determining the fate of exports from the five EAC states to Europe.
The negotiations will go on until Thursday and they are aimed at determining the fate of exports from the five EAC states to Europe.
“I am optimistic that we’ll get a
positive outcome from these all-important talks with the EU so that
Kenya’s products can continue enjoying preference and relief they have
been enjoying under the current regime,” she told the Nation.
PUNITIVE TAXES
The
delegation to Belgium consists of EAC affairs ministers from the five
member states, a legislator from Kenya and technical officers who have
been involved in the talks which started in 2002.
The Jubilee government had initially set itself a two-month deadline to sign the EPAs.
The Jubilee government had initially set itself a two-month deadline to sign the EPAs.
Kenya
is also keen to seek an end to the drawn-out negotiations for a pact
that will safeguard its exports to Europe valued at over Sh100 billion.
Pressure
is on the EAC to conclude the talks before the October deadline set by
the European Commission and the regional parliament, failure to which
punitive taxes would be introduced on goods from countries that have not
signed the EPAs.
Under the East African Customs
Management Act, Kenya does not have direct control on business deals
with Europe, having bound itself to a pact that requires five member
states to pursue EPAs as a bloc.
Kenya has a Sh105
billion market — for flowers, fish, tea and coffee — to lose, should
Europe introduce the punitive taxes. However, the other EAC members have
strongly resisted a reciprocal deal with EU, saying it could hurt their
domestic industrialisation.
This has placed Kenya in what technocrats call “an interesting scenario”.
While it is the strongest economy in the region, it has to take care not to hurt the interests of other members of the bloc.
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