Saturday, March 26, 2016

PS: Dar, Nairobi ties remain stable despite protocol hitch

JAFFAR MJASIRI
TANZANIA-Kenya diplomatic relations remain stable despite a breach of protocol by some Kenya government officials, including the Energy Cabinet Secretary, Charles Keter, who was this week denied entry into the country.

Speaking exclusively to ‘Daily News on Saturday’ yesterday in the city, the Permanent Secretary (PS) in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, East Africa, Regional and International Cooperation, Dr Aziz Mlima, clarified that it was crucial for any diplomat or government official to follow the protocols and procedures upon visiting any country in the world.
“It is simple logic that one cannot even visit his relative and surprise them by knocking their bedroom door without letting them know in advance,” said the career diplomat. He said that the protocols require every government official down to the district commissioner (DC) level to ask the ministry of foreign affairs when travelling to send a diplomatic communication requesting permission to enter the country of destination.
“Much as we are in the same East Africa Community (EAC) and there is cordial relations between our countries, all protocols have to be observed,” he stressed. Meanwhile, a section of Kenya media quoting diplomatic circles have faulted the ministry of energy for sending a delegation to inspect Tanzania’s Tanga Port without involving the foreign affairs ministry.
Energy cabinet secretary Charles Keter, his principal secretaries, Andrew Kamau and Joseph Njoroge and Lapsset chief executive Sylvester Kasuku were denied entry to the Tanga port where they had gone for inspection as a potential exit point for Uganda’s crude oil.
On Thursday, the Tanzanian Immigration Department distanced itself from claims by senior Kenya government officials who claimed on Wednesday that their passports were confiscated.
The Kenyan delegation further alleged that they were denied access to the port of Tanga, complaining that a delegation from Uganda, led by Energy Minister Irene Muloni was allowed to proceed with the tour without being disturbed by any Tanzanian official.
In a telephone interview with the ‘Daily News on Saturday’, Immigration Services Commissioner for Border Control and Management Abdullah Khamis said the claims by Kenyan officials that their travel documents had been confiscated were false, clarifying that they were only denied entry into the country.
“I am yet to receive enough information from my colleagues in Tanga. But the preliminary reports that I received earlier today have it that there was a meeting going on between top Tanzanian officials and the Ugandan delegation and therefore, allowing Kenyan officials could have disrupted the talks between the two countries,’’ he said.
According to Kenya’s ‘Daily Nation’, the top Kenyan officials had begun their journey at Lamu in the country’s northern coast, where they inspected the proposed port there before flying to Tanga. The trip was part of their mission to unlock a deadlock between Kenya and Uganda over whether a proposed oil pipeline to export Uganda’s oil would pass through Kenya or Tanzania.

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