Share
PUBLISHED ON January 22nd, 2016

DRC-Rwanda Border is Lifeline for Small Trader

GOMA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO Sifa Nsabimana had just crossed from Rwanda into Democratic Republic of Congo when a border police officer told her to pay a value-added tax of 500 Congolese francs (54 cents).

Nsabimana, a Rwandan who makes a living by selling tomatoes every day in DRC, showed the officer her receipt, proving that she had already paid the tax, which is imposed on all cross-border petty traders. The officer took the receipt, and an argument ensued. Eventually, Nsabimana, who lives in Gisenyi, says she paid the tax again another 500 Congolese francs to ensure that she would be able to do her business in Goma that day. The cities of Gisenyi and Goma hug either side of the international border that divides Rwanda and DRC. People from both countries trade goods with one another on a daily basis. Traders from Goma bring tarpaulins, fabric and other items to Gisenyi. Rwandan women often take food products, including milk, cabbage, carrots and beans, into DRC.

There are problems related to cross-border trade, but Papy Michel, head of the Goma office for the Trade Information Desk of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), says the practice yields huge benefits. Despite political wars and conflicts that are waged between Rwanda and DRC, these structures of small-scale traders contribute to socially consolidating peace in both cities as part of peace-building efforts, he says. Nsabimana, 39, borrowed 3,300 Rwandan francs ($4.43) in 2009 to start her cross-border trade business after her husband lost his job as a primary school teacher. Nsabimana often walks to Goma with two other women from her neighborhood. They take plantains, potatoes, onions and other goods to exchange for secondhand clothing, then they resell those clothes in Gisenyi.

I spend all my days crisscrossing the neighborhoods of Goma from 6 a.m. with my 9-month-old on my back and a basin filled with tomatoes on my head, and I return home around 5:30 p.m. before the border is closed at 6 p.m., she says. The work brings critical income to Nsabimana, her husband and her four children. That income helps her pay her daughters school fees, and shes saved some money in a bank account, she says. Nsabimana hopes that the tax situation at the border will improve. Right now, she says, various people demand cash, and its not always easy to know who shes required to pay. Prices should be fixed for taxable foods to avoid illegal tax collection, Nsabimana says. But even if theyre not, shell still cross the border. I have no other means to survive, Nsabimana says. Sylvestre Ndahayo translated this story from French. Esther Nsapu translated some interviews from Kinyarwanda.

Source: Kenya News

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of TradeMark Africa.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *