Kenya’s ambassador to Ethiopia and Djibouti Catherine Muigai Mwangi (in
yellow) and Ghanaian counterpart William Azumah Awinador-Kanyirige
(right) handing over the ratified continental free trade documents to
the African Union Commission chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat in Addis Ababa
on May 10 2018. ANDUALEM SISAY | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Kenya and Ghana Thursday handed over to the African Union
Commission (AUC) the documents ratifying the continental free trade
deal, becoming the first two countries to do so.
The two countries' representatives handed the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) papers to the AUC chairman, Dr Moussa Faki Mahamat, in Addis Ababa.
“Definitely
Kwame Nkrumah and Jomo Kenyatta must be proud of you and proud of us,”
said Dr Mahamat, upon receiving the AfCFTA documents.
“We encourage other member states to follow your footsteps and ratify the continental free trade agreement,” he added.
The
AfCFTA protocol was signed by 44 African countries last March in
Kigali, Rwanda during a special summit of African heads of states. Only
11, out of AU’s total 55 member states, were yet sign the protocol.
RELATED CONTENT: AfCFTA already exists, just look at rail, air connections
Like
any other protocol or convention, after the signatures of the heads of
state, AfCFTA has to go through the legal process of each country to be
approved as law and domesticated accordingly.
“We are
hopeful that within the next nine to twelve months we are going to
achieve the minimum 22 countries required to implement the agreement,”
said Albert M. Muchanga, the AU Commissioner for the Department of Trade
and Industry.
Commenting on the significance of their
action, Kenya’s ambassador to Ethiopia and Djibouti Catherine Muigai
Mwangi, said that as indicated in the blueprint of Agenda 2063, the
ratification and implementation was mandatory for the free movement of
people and goods.
“It is a major milestone in achieving
this goal of integration among African countries. I encourage all other
member states to ratify,” she said in Addis Ababa.
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