Amina Mohamed. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Benedict Oramah, the chairman and president of African Export-Import Bank, Thursday confirmed that the multilateral lender is relocating to the Ugandan capital, Kampala, after Nairobi kept it waiting for more than three years for the necessary approvals.
- Mr Oramah said that the lender is now set to sign a deal with Uganda before the end of the year to establish its regional branch in Kampala.
- Relocating to Kampala means all potential benefits of hosting such an office, including investment in buildings, rents, and employment, will now accrue to Uganda.
- Observers also see the loss of hosting rights to Kampala as a blow to President Uhuru Kenyatta’s efforts to create a regional financial hub in Nairobi and to open Kenya to Africans.
Kenya’s reluctance to grant the African Export Import Bank
(Afreximbank) diplomatic status has forced the agency to move its Sh3
billion regional headquarters to Uganda, denying Nairobi the benefits
that come with hosting such prominent international organisations.
Benedict
Oramah, the chairman and president of African Export-Import Bank,
Thursday confirmed that the multilateral lender is relocating to the
Ugandan capital, Kampala, after Nairobi kept it waiting for more than
three years for the necessary approvals.
Mr Oramah said
that the lender is now set to sign a deal with Uganda before the end of
the year to establish its regional branch in Kampala.
“It
took too long to obtain the necessary approvals from Kenya, that is the
reason we made the decision to go to Uganda at their invitation,” Dr
Oramah said.
Relocating to Kampala means all potential benefits of hosting
such an office, including investment in buildings, rents, and
employment, will now accrue to Uganda.
Observers also
see the loss of hosting rights to Kampala as a blow to President Uhuru
Kenyatta’s efforts to create a regional financial hub in Nairobi and to
open Kenya to Africans.
Afrexim, which finances and promotes African trade, has in the
past decade become a significant player in Kenya’s economy, having
financed big-ticket deals, including national carrier Kenya Airways.
The
Treasury had in 2016 indicated that Kenya would finally sign the deal,
paving the way for establishment of the regional headquarters in
Nairobi. The plans had been in the works for over three years.
Cabinet
Secretary Henry Rotich had said in a letter to Afreximbank that his
office had completed a review of the agreement to set up the office and
the same had been forwarded to the Foreign Affairs ministry for
“finalisation.”
“This is to inform you that the
Treasury has now completed review of the branch office agreement between
the Republic of Kenya and Afreximbank after consultations with Mr
Kudakwashe Matereke, regional branch manager for East Africa,” Mr Rotich
said in a letter dated September 22, 2016.
“We have
forwarded the agreement to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for
finalisation and to formally communicate to Afreximbank.”
Besides,
Mr Rotich had suggested that the agreement would be concluded on the
sidelines of the 2016 annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank Group in Washington, DC between October 7-9.
It
now appears that a decision by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
bureaucrats led by then Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed to dig in
scuttled the process.
The Foreign Affairs ministry was
said to be uncomfortable with several clauses in a draft agreement with
the Pan-African lender touching on taxation and diplomatic privileges
that Afreximbank had sought.
Afreximbank had wanted its
employees and operations to be accorded diplomatic immunity and tax
exemptions in line with the privileges accorded other multilateral
institutions.
The lender had argued that the privileges
were not unique to Kenya as they had been granted by host governments
in Abuja (Nigeria), Harare (Zimbabwe), Abidjan (Cote d’Ivoire), Tunis
(Tunisia) and Egypt (Cairo), its headquarters.
It also cited special privileges enjoyed by similar multilateral institutions and diplomatic missions in Nairobi.
Yesterday, Mr Rotich asked the Business Daily to direct any questions on the deal to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
“I suggest you get comments from Foreign Affairs ministry, since they are the ones who sign host country agreements,” he said.
Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Monica Juma remained tight-lipped on the matter when reached for comment.
Dr
Juma was the Principal Secretary in the ministry before rising to the
helm of the docket. Ms Mohamed, her predecessor, now heads the Education
ministry.
The African states-owned Afreximbank, whose
mandate is to help expand and diversify African trade, says it has
approved more than $60 billion (Sh6 trillion) in credit facilities to
African businesses since 1994.
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