Tanzania says it has sufficient supply of chicken from local farmers. PHOTO FILE | NATION
Tanzania has maintained a hardline position on its ban on
imports of chicken and poultry products from the US, which it imposed in
2006, and now Washington is pushing discussions on the matter to the
regional level, demanding that Dar give a justification for the ban
through a process that is above board.
The US says Tanzania’s reasons for the ban should be consistent with Word Trade Organisation requirements.
But
the EAC’s Sectoral Council of Ministers Of Trade, Industry, Finance
And Investment (SCTIFI), meeting in Arusha early last month, resolved
that the US pursue the matter on a bilateral basis with the concerned
partner states.
Tanzania has used the ban to protect
its poultry farmers from what it sees as unfair competition posed by
cheap imports of chicken from the US, whose farmers are supported by the
government through subsidies.
The
US government officials said that despite correspondence with Tanzanian
government institutions, there has been no light shed on the matter.
“The US requested that a justification for the ban be provided
based on a risk analysis and scientific reasons, which would be
consistent with WTO obligations. In this regard, the US called for
transparency in the process,” reads a report by SCTIFI.
Detailed information
US
government officials informed the EAC Sectoral Council of Ministers
that it had provided detailed information to Tanzania on the ban on
poultry imports from the US and shared it with the EAC Secretariat.
Washington
further told the meeting that the same information was also shared with
Kenya through the veterinary services agency and the Ministry of
Agriculture.
But the EAC requested that this information be shared with the ministry responsible for trade in Kenya.
The
EAC-US trade has been on a rocky path since the EAC member states
agreed to fully ban imported secondhand clothes and shoes from the US by
2019 to protect local manufacturers. The decision was reached during
the EAC Summit in March 2016.
The EAC expressed
concerns that some used clothes and foot wear were originating from Asia
through the US that could not be used and therefore increasing
incidence of dumping.
In
return, the US-based Secondary Materials and Recycled Textiles
Association filed a petition on March 21 to review Kenya, Uganda and
Tanzania’s Africa Growth and Opportunity Act eligibility.
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