By GEORGE OMONDI, omondi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
The close to 4,000 Japanese delegates attending the
sixth session of Tokyo International Conference on African Development
(Ticad) are on a mission to rewrite history.
The team led by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has also thrust
Kenya, the gateway to Africa, on the cusp of history as the first
country to host a Ticad session outside Tokyo.
The Japan before Ticad is quite obscure. Just like
other African states, Kenyan firms have struggled to gain a foothold of
the market which would be an alternative outlet for cut flowers, tea,
coffee, nuts, fish fillets, tobacco and sisal fibres.
“There are substantial exports of cut flowers to
Japan and the market has been growing over time but we can’t compare to
the EU,” Dr Margate Muchui, chief executive at Fresh Produce Exporters
and Association Kenya told the Business Daily.
“Exports of fruits and vegetables has however not
taken off due to stringent access requirements for the Japanese market,
especially the requirement to fumigate produce which makes doing
business costly.”
Analysts see other challenges beyond the difficult
market access rules. They reckon that a Japanese, unlike a Chinese or
Indian counterpart, still conjures up an image of a European-type
patronising bureaucrat.
“Africa has traditionally regarded Japan as elitist
and West-like, being an OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development) member just like rich states of US and UK,” said
University of Nairobi political Science scholar George Katete.
“China and India discovered the strategic
importance of Kenya (and Africa) early enough. They have won hearts not
only by providing cheaper products but also by their
‘no-string-attached’ loans.”
China and India share ‘developing country’ tag with
most African states. India which was colonised by British has
particularly been vocal about its common heritage with Kenya.
“Japan has maintained high quality of products that
it sells in Africa but high price has locked it out of the mass market
enjoyed by Indian and Chinese firms,” said Dr Katete.
Japanese investors are also unaware of Africa’s
business potential. Two months ahead of Nairobi Ticad, Kenyans in the
diaspora had to organise SMEs seminar in Nagoya, the largest city in the
Chubu region of Japan in May.
The goal of the seminar, which attracted 130
participants, according Kenya’s Tokyo Embassy, was market Kenya’s (and
Africa’s) business potential to Japanese SMEs.
Being the backbone of any country’s economy,
involvement of SMEs would ensure that a critical mass attended the Ticad
which enters its climax in Nairobi on Saturday.
In a 2012, paper titled ‘Comparative study on Asian
approaches to Africa: an introductory reflection’ presented to the
University of Miyazaki, scholar Takuo Iwata echoed these sentiments.
The paper traces Japan’s laidback role to the period
before 1990s when unlike Asia and China, Japan maintained no formal
policy on Africa.
During that period, Japan had limited political
communication with Africa, cut its overseas development assistance (ODA)
to bare minimum and its firms were less interested in the continent.
Nairobi Ticad hopes to build on the momentum
created by the previous Ticad forums. While trade volumes with Kenya is
still low (Sh92.25 billion) compared to China’s Sh329.29 billion and
India’s Sh261.47 billion last year, Japan has over the four years of
Ticad been creating its way into nearly every sphere of Africa’s
economy.
The Sh3.2 trillion Ticad initiative – whose sixth
session is being held in Nairobi will see Japan catch up with other
Asian states in controlling Africa’s energy, environmental management,
infrastructure, education, tourism and agriculture. “Ticad is a
latter-day repackaging of Japan’s role in Africa. I see it as a
marketing effort,” says Dr Katete.
“Japan appears to be appreciating strategic
importance of Africa. Its top leadership appear to be telling us to also
think of Japan — not just China and India — in our shift to East
policy.”
Food value chains
A Ticad progress report prepared by Japanese
foreign affairs ministry shows that Japan is already training
smallholder farmers on commercial farming in Kenya and 19 other
countries in Africa.
The campaign dubbed Smallholder Horticulture
Empowerment Project (SHEP) has so far benefited 1,324 farmers of East
African Community, Egypt, South Africa, Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Madagascar,
Ethiopia and Sudan. Others are Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria,
Cote d’Ivore, Niger, Burkina Faso, South Sudan and Senegal.
“Japan has assisted for doubling gross rice
production, promoting income generation of African smallholder farmers
including women and youths, and establishing food value chains which
links production, processing and logistics,” the progress report states.
And to a conflict-ridden region, Japan’s
fence-sitting days are over. Ticad has transformed the Asian nation into
an active peacekeeper. The report shows that Japan has not only been
conducting counter-piracy operations at the East African coast (Gulf of
Aden) since 2009 but has also contributed immensely to peacekeeping
efforts in Africa.
Ticad progress report shows that Japan has
contributed Sh100 million to fight piracy off the coast of Somalia,
provided technical assistance to the Djibouti Coast Guard and
contributed Sh100 billion to support various peace initiatives in Africa
between 2013 and March 2016.
From last September, Japan has stationed its
engineers in Nairobi to train East African peace-keeping personnel on
how to operate heavy equipment under its Sh4 billion African Rapid
Deployment of Engineering Capabilities project.
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