Kenya’s persistent trade tiffs with neighbours
may be a result of dynamics beyond the region, which could require
political solutions.
Two of Kenya’s
neighbours, Somalia and Tanzania, have recently stalled business
ventures for Kenyans over alleged bad policy by Nairobi. Tanzania
cancelled landing rights for three more airlines — AirKenya, Fly540 and
Safarilink Aviation — after Kenya insisted Tanzanians arriving in the
country have to be quarantined for 14 days.
For
Somalia, the old story of miraa ban returned last week after a
delegation of farmers’ representatives returned empty-handed. They had
travelled to seek audience with Somalia officials but instead were met
with a list of demands. They include a tax charge of $4 per kilo, which
the farmers quickly accepted.
However, the
demands veered off miraa sales and Somalia officials asked that Kenya
treats it as an equal partner, stop violating Somali airspace and that
it allows in Somalia goods including fish, rice, sugar, honey, meat and
milk.
Security checks
The
farmers were also told to report to the Kenyan authorities that they
will only be allowed to sell miraa in Somalia if flights from Mogadishu
are not forced to stop in Wajir for security checks.
Those demands were hardly in the
representatives’ pay grade and there are doubts about Somalia’s current
capacity to produce the goods cited.
But the miraa story has always been political.
In
2016, Agriculture CS Peter Munya, then governor of Meru, ran into a
diplomatic storm after he offered ‘recognition’ to Somaliland, the
breakaway region of Somalia, if they assured a steady miraa market.
No country in the world has ever recognised Somaliland, even though they have own military, currency and Central Bank.
Fizzled out
Mogadishu
reacted by accusing Kenya of trying to “break-up” Somalia. The matter
quietly fizzled out as diplomats handled it and direct flights resumed.
A number of diplomats in Nairobi have told the Nation
that the demands given to the farmers were ridiculous considering that
Somalia’s Foreign Minister Ahmed Isse Awad was in Nairobi for a series
of bilateral meetings but never raised them.
“There
is no communication problem between Somalia and Kenya and to conflate
issues of security and trade is not an idea either side wants,” one
official told the Nation last week.
“There has never been any problem really because whenever bilateral issues come up, we often sit down to discuss them.”
Nairobi
has had a month-long standoff with Tanzania, which has led some
analysts to think the region, despite having integration blocs, may be
harbouring different ambitions.
“One would
expect friendly states to precede border closures with negotiations
through existing diplomatic channels or informal conversations between
Heads of State,” said Mr Nasong’o Muliro, a lecturer of International
Relations at the Technical University of Kenya.
No longer passive
He argues that the response of Somalia signals a country no longer passive to perceived exploitation.
“The
current Somalia government feels it does not need Kenya and Africa at
this point ostensibly because global powers are looking at Somalia’s
rich natural resources.”
Mr Muliro said the
East African Community is too focused on trade and security issues, but
is poor in disaster management, which may explain the disjointed manner
of dealing with Covid-19.
Dr Kigen
Morumbasi, a lecturer of International Relations and Security at the
Strathmore University, says the tiffs could persist as long as each
State pursues its own victories at the expense of mutual existence.
Expand interests
“The
best way to overcome these shortfalls is to expand interests beyond
domestic and regional ones to view the international system as a whole
and, therefore, seek policies that would benefit the region. The
strengthening of a common identity is the only way the African dream of
integration and prosperity can be achieved.”
Trade expert Peter Mwencha told the Nation
changing dynamics in the EAC (where Tanzania and Kenya belong) and the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development (where Kenya and Somalia
belong) have contributed to the persistent tiffs.
“For
Somalia, the interference of foreign actors cannot be ruled out. When
it comes to Tanzania, internal political agenda coupled with historical
grievances could be the contributing factors,” said Dr Mwencha, who is
the secretary-general of the International Relations Society of Kenya.
“The
priority for Kenya’s foreign policy decision-makers should be on
fostering better relations with its neighbours, however difficult this
may seem at the moment.”
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