Kenya will continue doing business with
Iran despite the Middle East country facing sanctions from the UN,
Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed said on Thursday.
Briefing
journalists in Nairobi on her recent tour of the US and Iran, Ms
Mohamed said Kenya needed Iran’s market for its agriculture goods. UN
sanctions against Iran did not affect the agricultural sector, she
added.
“We sell about 20 per cent of our tea to Iran
and we will continue to engage on a higher scale. There is a lot of
potential. We have also invited the country’s agriculture and foreign
affairs officials to visit Kenya,” said Ms Mohamed.
Powerful countries in the world, she added, were doing business with Iran and wondered why Kenya should be stopped.
The minister said she would continue to engage both the East and the West in efforts to woo investments.
“We
are exploring opportunities in Japan, Korea and China, which have big
markets for our products. We are not running away from our other friends
such as the US,” said the Cabinet Secretary.
She
announced that next month, she would be in Spain to woo investors and
tourists, reiterating that all the initiatives were aimed at marketing
Kenya as an investment hub.
COMMON POSITION
She
also disclosed that two East African countries had yet to agree on the
Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) before the region could take a
common position on it.
But Ms Mohamed expressed
confidence that the issues would be solved by next month, saying that
the region was waiting for the European Union to decide what to be
tabled.
The delayed conclusion of an EPA stalled
following disagreements touching on economic and development
co-operation, rules of origin, export taxes and the ‘most-favoured
nation’ clause. These sticking points are contested by the EAC, which is
negotiating a common position for the region.
The
minister asked Kenyans to exploit job opportunities in Saudi Arabia and
Qatar. More than 200 visas, she added, were processed every day for
Kenyans to work in Saudi Arabia. However, she cautioned Kenyans against
going to foreign countries without notifying the ministry.
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