Kenya agreed to allow in more Ugandan goods in the hope that
Kampala will finally reach a favourable decision to extend the Standard
Gauge Railway to its territory.
On
his three-day State visit, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni seemed to
have scored more points for his government to boost trade sales into
Kenya, leaving the public to accuse Kenyan officials of way too much
easily.
COMMERCE
Nairobi
agreed to raise Ugandan sugar exports quota into Kenya from 36,000 to
90,000 metric tonnes, as long as they prove they manufactured it.
Kenya also lifted the ban on Ugandan poultry and offered it land in Naivasha for an inland dry port.
The
pledges seemed to incense the public, which went on social media to
claim the country was mortgaging its economy. Still, there was no
guarantee from Kampala that it will buy into the railway deal.
On Saturday, senior government officials were
defending the deals as “mutually beneficial”. The Principal Secretary at
the Foreign Affairs ministry Macharia Kamau stated in a short text
message: “The point of all this is to create a more integrated market
where we have free flow of goods and services between the two countries
without hindrance. And to create better competition for our markets
internally and within East Africa.” The chief administrative secretary
at the same ministry, Mr Ababu Namwamba, was even more candid; “The
talks led by our two presidents cleared a number of gridlocks that have
been constraining free flow of commerce across our borders.”
“Overall,
the deals should raise the volumes of trade between these two close
partners with the domino effect likely to pull the rest of the East
African Community along,” he added.
The
unsaid target though seemed to be the SGR. At a cost of about Sh400
billion, the line that now runs from Mombasa to Naivasha is not yet
viable, despite carrying 3.2 million containers of cargo between Kenya’s
biggest cities so far.
State House said it was inviting Uganda to come on board, having done so initially without success.
“Kenya
is inviting Uganda to join in the joint development of the SGR to
ensure it continues to Kampala,” State House said during the visit.
REGIONAL RAIL
The
actual length through Kenya could cost the government more than Sh750
billion, from Mombasa to Malaba. Most of the money is coming from China
in form of loans. The matter of financing for the remainder of the line
is currently under fresh discussion between Nairobi and Beijing, but
Uganda has previously been reluctant because of high debt.
When
President Uhuru Kenyatta toured Beijing last year, he proposed that
part of the money from China should come as a grant, to alleviate the
debt burden on Kenya.
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