A consumer shops for Brookside dairy milk products in a supermarket in Nairobi, Kenya. PHOTO | SIMON MAINA | AFP
Kenya’s internal political intrigues are increasingly becoming a new non-tariff barrier to trade in the East African Community, potentially harming the success of the Common Market, with Ugandan milk producers being
the latest victims.The Uganda Dairy Development Authority (DDA) this week after
complaints from some exporters and producers said that authorities in Kenya were
limiting the number of export permits for powdered milk and issuing others at a
slow pace.
Brookside Uganda – a firm linked to Kenya’s ex-President Uhuru
Kenyatta’s family and now one of Uganda’s leading milk producers and exporters
– alongside Pearl Dairies, Jesa Farm Dairy and others complained that their
stock was going bad for lack of market.
Brookside Uganda General Manager Benson Mwangi said Nairobi is
denying the milk processor export permits and that those given are often
delayed.
“Effective March 19, 2023, the Kenyan government through Kenya
Dairy Board stopped issuing permits for our dairy products in the Kentrade
system, affecting our factory output significantly,” he said in a letter dated
April 5.
The problem seems to revolve around the current Kenyan administration’s
beef with businesses associated with the former president, whose family’s dairy
firm Brookside is a major producer of powdered milk in Uganda.
The move has created confusion among Ugandan sellers, who had
hoped that an earlier suspension of a ban on powdered milk by Kenya could help
them resume sales.
There have been political lacings all over the on-off milk tiff,
with Kenyatta’s allies in Kenya alleging a plot to sabotage businesses linked
to the former president.
“These people are doing things with a lot of political
consideration without looking at the market dynamics. This kind of decision
will definitely create shortage of the commodity in the market,” argued Godfrey
Osotsi, senator for Vihiga County in Western Kenya and a member of the opposition
Orange Democratic Movement (ODM).
“Clearly, they are fighting the Kenyatta family. They are
weaponising state institutions for revenge,” he told The EastAfrican on
Wednesday.
In March, Kenya’s Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua told a
gathering the government was stopping powdered milk importation to protect
local producers.
“It is the government’s responsibility to protect our farmers in
the coffee, tea and dairy sub-sectors,” he said.
“Challenges in the milk sector have been caused by the monopoly we
have. One person bought all milk companies in the country and was also involved
in the importation of powdered milk from foreign countries,” he said, referring
to the Kenyatta family.
According to Prof XN Iraki, an economics lecturer at the
University of Nairobi, politics and business are inseparable.
“It’s hard to separate politics and economics in the dairy
industry after what some politicians have said in the past. But protectionism,
like subsidies, is old economics. We should let the market do its work,” he
argued.
Fearing losses
Kenya buys Uganda’s milk to the tune of $138.2 million, according
to latest figures. But, according to Mwangi, Brookside Uganda has not sold a
litre of milk in Kenya in the past two months.
He said their milk is about to expire, which would be a huge loss.
The company has also not been able to buy milk from farmers, which
has affected the farm-gate prices, with famers reporting price falls from
Ush1,500 ($0.40) per litre to as low as Ush400($0.10).
Kenya exports palm oil worth $61.5 million, sorghum ($12 million),
vegetables ($2.6 million) and legumes worth $1.7 million, to Uganda every year.
But observers say the trade row, especially over powdered milk, could
have long-running implications for trade across the region as the restrictions
go against trade protocols under the East African Community (EAC).
Uganda’s former minister and now businessman Capt Mike Mukula says
there are indications that the Kenya government actions are being influenced by
personal interests, which he termed unfortunate.
He said it was a miscalculation by leaders to politicise trade
between the two countries, adding that Uganda has invested heavily in the dairy
industry to increase production.
“If you are producing your product within EAC, you are supposed to
enjoy the market. We keep on reminding the partner states that they must play
and understand the game, and that the game is competitive, and market driven.
East Africans should know that this is a market for them,” said Mukula, who is
also a leader in the ruling National Resistance Movement.
“There is a need for a bilateral meeting between the presidents of
the two countries to resolve this problem, which is against the purpose of
EAC,” he said, adding that the bloc was meant to maximise comparative advantage
and, in this case, Uganda, which has 48 percent of the region’s arable land,
can produce agricultural products cheaper than other countries.
Kenya has in the past two years restricted exports of poultry and
dairy products from Uganda, although the issue on poultry was resolved after
Kampala threatened to ban goods from Kenya.
The Ugandan Cabinet had in 2021 directed its Agriculture ministry
to identify and list Kenyan products that would be banned in retaliation to
Kenya’s continued restriction of its agricultural products.
“We have been too patient. In the past, we have not reciprocated,
but now we are going to. This has gone on for too long and within a short time
they too will understand what we are going through,” Rebecca Kadaga, EAC
minister, warned at the time.
The cabinet, chaired by President Yoweri Museveni however rejected
this decision, saying it was against the spirit of integration.
Ban resolved
This week, Dairy Development Authority Executive Director Samson
Akankiza estimated 20 percent market losses due to the standoff.
“Other products are getting permits except for milk powder, but
the market is still open, and Uganda milk players are exporting products
there,” he said.
In March, Kenya’s Livestock Principal Secretary Harry Kimtai
suspended a notice issued earlier by the Kenya Dairy Board (KDB) banning
importation of Ugandan powder milk into Kenya.
This week, KDB Managing Director Margret Kibiogy said there were
no issues between the two countries.
“Trade between the two countries is smooth,” she responded in a
text message to The EastAfrican.
A number of trade issues have so far been resolved between the two
countries, but the matter of milk imports is pending.
Kenya was supposed to send a delegation to Kampala last year on a
fact-finding mission but that is yet to be achieved.
The Kenya-Uganda trade wars have hurt consumers in both countries
as they have led to higher import prices. Experts have warned that consumers
will be the main losers.
Stephen Asiimwe, CEO of the Private Sector Foundation-Uganda
(PSFU), said no meaningful trade will be realised in Africa unless countries
fight NTBs.
“We condemn these NTBs such as roadblocks, exorbitant taxes at
borders, and very difficult conditions. We call upon our Foreign Affairs
ministry to fight these interruptions because they foster conflicts and
fights,” he said.
But in Kenya, politicians allied to the government were praising
the move to block entry of powder milk from Uganda. Samson Cherargei, Nandi
Senator and a member of the ruling United Democratic Alliance (UDA), said the
decision will build local producers.
“If our dairy farmers are well provided with affordable feeds, we
can provide enough milk. We can't allow monopoly of the dairy sector,” he said.
Zaheer Jhanda, a lawmaker from Nyaribari Chache, said there was no
politics in play, just business.
“It's a normal policy decision. We must protect our local dairy
farmers. Nothing political,” he told The EastAfrican. Uganda buys
chicks from Kenya, feeds them, once they grow and lay eggs they sell the same
eggs to Kenya,” Jhanda said.
Uganda’s State Minister for Co-operatives Frederick Ngobi
said expansion of Uganda’s market will end the chaos.
“We are now securing other bigger markets where we can sell our
products, not only milk but also other products. We have already secured markets
from Nigeria and South Africa for many of these products,” he said on Monday.
“That one should not bother us much because we always have
dialogues under the East African Community. There are laws that govern us in
the community and that will be addressed,” he added.
New markets
In February, President William Ruto in a special message to
President Museveni delivered by Moses Kuria, Kenya’s Special Presidential Envoy
for the Tripartite Free Trade Area, who is also the cabinet secretary for
investment, trade and industry, agreed to open up markets to Ugandan milk,
chicken and eggs.
Nairobi remains Kampala’s major market, but these persistent
barriers have prompted a search for new markets, particularly in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, South Sudan, Zambia and Algeria.
After his visit to Algeria early this year, President Museveni
announced the two countries had signed a deal that would see Uganda export milk
worth $500 million to Algiers. Already, some Ugandan companies are set to sign
supply agreements with Algerian buyers.
Pearl Dairies – makers of Lato milk – with a daily capacity of
800,000 litres, secured annual supplies of milk to Zambia after the company
suffered major losses when Kenya stopped its exports in 2019.
Uganda’s Agriculture Minister Frank Tumwebaze on Tuesday said the
Ministry of East African Community Affairs has taken up the milk issue and is
engaging with the authorities in Kenya. Meanwhile he called on dairy farmers to
mobilise Ugandans to consume more milk so that the local market is exploited.
“We hope Kenya finds it reasonable and logical to openly trade
with us. We believe they will understand that we depend on each other. Why
should ordinary Kenyans be subjected to expensive milk, yet we can supply it
cheaper?”
He added that the ministry is looking for alternative markets,
including domestic ones, and local producers are being encouraged to make other
milk products such as yoghurt for local consumption.
“At weddings and parties, you cannot see yoghurt, mil, or even
bushera (millet porridge). All you see being served are other drinks that you
don’t produce. If you cannot take your products, whom do you expect to do it,”
he said.
Reporting by Nelson Naturinda, Gerald Andae, Jonathan Kamoga and
Moses Nyamori.
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