EAC Secretary-General Peter Mathuki (centre) when he inspected the 125 acres of land in Kisongo, Arusha donated to the Community by the government of Tanzania. PHOTO | COURTESY
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Summary
· EAC Secretary-General Peter Mathuki said they are looking for funding to develop the land handed over by Tanzanian President Samia Hassan on March 3
The East African Community
Secretariat will soon break the ground for the new headquarters in Arusha on
the 125-acre land donated by the government of Tanzania.
EAC Secretary-General Peter Mathuki
said they are looking for funding to develop the land handed over by Tanzanian
President Samia Hassan on March 3.
He said he would be seeking
technical experts from member states to come up with a development plan for the
parcel located in Kisongo on the outskirts of Arusha town, off the Dodoma road.
Dr Mathuki and Arusha Region
administrative officials led by regional commissioner John Mongella toured the
land on Friday to locate beacons and said they would secure it as the
development plan is worked on.
Unprecedented
“The offer of this size of land is
unprecedented. We have started the process of developing it and will soon break
ground,” he said.
President Samia officially handed
over the title deed of the land to the Secretary-General this month, at a time
member states are racing each other to offer resources for hosting of the
Community’s organs and agencies.
The Council of Ministers has commissioned
a review of the distribution of the organs and institutions of the EAC, with a
view to ensuring equity. The Secretariat is expected to present a report before
the next Ordinary Council meeting, expected mid this year.
12 organs and institutions
The EAC has 12 organs and
institutions, with Arusha as secretariat headquarters. The East African
Legislative Assembly, the East African Court of Justice and East African
Competition Authority, whose headquarters are yet to be determined, are
temporarily housed at EAC headquarters. Nine others are permanently hosted by
different partner states. Tanzania and Uganda host more than one EAC
institution, while Kenya, Rwanda and Burundi host one each.
The Council has been grappling with
an aggressive contest pitting Tanzania against Kenya and Uganda on who is well
placed to host the proposed East African Monetary Institute, precursor of the
regional central bank
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