Monday, May 3, 2021

Why President Samia’s planned address to Parliament has excited Kenyans

Samia Parliament

President Samia Suluhu Hassan addresses Parliament in Dodoma, on April 22, 2021

By Nation. Africa

President Samia Suluhu’s planned two –day state visit to Nairobi is exciting enthusiasts of regional integration, who hope she could help mend relations between the two countries.

President Samia’s visit comes almost five years since her predecessor, the late John Magufuli, made a similar visit.

A tentative programme released by State House in Chamwino, said President Suluhu will hold bilateral talks with her host, President Uhuru Kenyatta, before addressing a joint sitting of the National Assembly and the Senate.

“President Samia will attend and address a forum of Kenyan and Tanzanian businesspeople in Nairobi for the purpose of addressing various issues of trade and investment between Kenya and Tanzania,” Gerson Msigwa, Suluhu’s Spokesman, said last evening.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan address to Kenya’s parliament follows that of President Kikwete who did so just before his term elapsed almost seven years ago.

Her trip is significant because it is an immediate response to an invitation from President Kenyatta last month.

It also comes a week after she addressed the Tanzanian Parliament, vowing to improve local policies to attract foreign investors and sustain relations within the East African Community (EAC) and other regional trading blocs.

The immediate concern is how the two countries can harmonise their policies on Covid-19.

Tanzania has not given any  updates on infections even though the president  did create a committee to look into the issue.

However, the team’s terms of reference, identity and timelines were not released.

Yet Covid-19 caused flight suspensions and a temporary ban on truck drivers last year from entering Tanzania after Kenya restricted travellers from the neighbouring country.

“In my view, top on her priority list should be to remove the non-tariff barriers to trade between Kenya and Tanzania. The Kenya-Tanzania bilateral trade is largely latent and needs Suluhu to make it kinetic,” argued Dismas Mokua, a political risk analyst for businesses involved in cross-border trade.

In her address to Parliament last week, Suluhu admitted that Tanzania’s business environment has been unproductive with irregular changes in policies. She said she will make it a priority to relate with other countries for business.

“If you call it change, then it will be a renewed effort on economic diplomacy,” she said, referring to better ties with the East African Community, Southern Africa Development Community and the recent Africa Continental Free Trade Area.

Part of the changes will be to reduce red tape, harmonise taxation and levies as well as ease entry of investors by engaging in lots of diplomacy.

“Our diplomatic staff have to be competent in striking deals in investment and trade promotion as well as seek strategic partners in tourism,” she said.

Just over 40 days in office, observers say her early indications point towards Tanzania having a more open outlook in terms of regional relations and partnerships with her neighbours.

“Her highlighting of tax matters is a good indicator of attention to some of the detailed issues that hinder trade in EAC,” said Mr Leonard Wanyama, coordinator of the East Africa Tax and Governance Network.

amutambo@ke.nationmedia.com

 

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