News Tag: Rwanda

Trade ministry considers website for businessmen eyeing Africa

Minister of Industry and Trade Mounir Fakhri Abdel Nour has announced plans to launch a website serving the Egyptian businessmen who search for investment opportunities in Africa. Chairman of the ministry’s Commercial Service Ali El-Leithy said the website will contain data on African markets of interest to Egyptian businessmen. Outstanding companies, insurance opportunities, customs duties, shipping options and costs, and locations of Egyptian commercial representation offices will be available on the planned website, including tenders put up by African governments, according to Leithy. The website may also feature market studies about goods and trading sectors within each African country, as well as a given country’s most important exports and imports and its trade agreements with Egypt. It will also announce exhibitions hosted by African countries. It is worth mentioning that Egypt, in June, hosted the inking of a free trade agreement between Africa’s biggest economic blocs, the Common Market of Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the East African Community (EAC). Source: State information service

Trade integration key to reduce poverty and support Africa’s growth

Africa continues to remain vastly unexplored, and making Africa’s most remote regions accessible for trade will not only promote prosperity in those regions, but also elevate the continent’s continued growth path, according to The Role of Trade in Ending Poverty report recently released by the World Bank Group and World Trade Organisation. It is important that leaders on the continent understand the role that international trade plays in development and poverty reduction in Africa. The value of trade is measured by the extent to which it delivers better livelihoods, measured through higher incomes, greater variety of choice and a more sustainable future, among others, the report indicates. While countries need to continue to establish better trade relations with international partners, enabling trade routes within the continent can yield numerous benefits for the region and its people. Since 1978, when DHL entered the African market, there has been a degree of transformation both economically and socially, simply due to access to new services. If we look at Cape Verde, for instance, a small country consisting of 10 islands, the quickest and most reliable way of transporting goods to and from the country is by air. Currently, there are three commercial airlines operating in the area and given that commercial airlines offer priority to passenger baggage, offloading of cargo from these planes was a regular occurrence. In order to better service the area, we introduced a DHL flight which operates between Senegal and Cape Verde weekly. This dedicated flight route provides various...

African ministers warm up to December WTO forum

African Trade ministers Monday informally converged in Nairobi to prepare for the 10th World Trade Organization (WTO) ministerial conference slated for December. Speaking at the meeting at a Nairobi hotel, Foreign affairs secretary Amina Mohamed said the informal meeting of African trade ministers is set to brainstorm on the issues on the table for the ministerial conference. Some of the issues on the table according to Ms Mohamed include agriculture, market access, industrial growth and public health among others. The (WTO) ministerial conference, is expected to bring together over 6000 participants to discuss issues of concern in Africa’s trade relations. “I believe you will all readily agree with me that our common objective is to turn the Nairobi Ministerial Conference into a forum for harvesting specific outcomes particularly with respect to the coming into force of the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) and an agreement on a balanced and ambitious Post-Bali Work Programme,” said Ms Mohamed. She said it is important that African countries practice value addition on their raw materials before export. ADD VALUE “We want to be able to add value on goods in our country so that we do not export jobs to other countries, we do not want to open up our markets so much and reduce chances of us industrializing,” Ms Mohammed said. Speaking at the same meeting the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) Secretary General, Dr Mukhisa Kituyi called on African governments to slow down on commodity exports. “Slowing down on commodity...

Africa’s ambitious but historic 2017 free trade zone target

The Tripartite Free Trade Area (TFTA) signed between 26 African nations in 2015 is the most significant and historic trade deal signed on the continent in decades. The new and vast economic zone will link three trade blocs that would unite 57 percent of the continent’s population and allow free movement of goods and people with predictable positive effects on the African economy. The initial agreement, signed in Egypt’s Red Sea resort—Sharm El-Sheik—in last month, aims to combine the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), the South African Development Community (SADC), and the East African Community (EAC) to one trade region. What member states agreed, in theory, requires practical implementation of the treaty as well as negotiations and ratifications by the respective national parliaments. At a recent AU heads of states summit African leaders decided the agreement to come into effect in 2017. With less than two years left, some African countries might struggle to meet the given deadline target. Given the current geo-political realities on the continent, it’s hard to see how such a short deadline could be met at the same time and by all member states. The difference in size, economic strength, bilateral relation, political situation and stage of development amongst member states might represent a challenge to the 2017 goal, some experts say. For instance, many African countries have poor relations between them and that says it all – without the prerequisite of serious diplomatic and political relations it could take considerable time for...

Kampala-Kigali railway project derails

Uganda looks north as Rwanda considers eastern connection The Kampala-Kigali leg of Standard Gauge Railway line, under the northern corridor infrastructure development initiative, may delay as Uganda shifts its priority to “a more economically viable line” to South Sudan. And in the wake of Kampala’s changed priorities, Rwanda has been left with no option but to look east to Tanzania, a non-member of the so-called coalition of the willing of the northern corridor, for a quicker railway connection to the sea. Individuals familiar with these developments told The Independent in Kigali on condition that they are not named that the burden is now on Kenya, with huge business interest in Rwanda and the vast DR Congo, to try and persuade Uganda to stick to the original plan to prioritise construction of Kampala-Kigali railway line. Kenya has invested massively in the expansion of Mombasa port and is vigorously promoting it as the port of choice for the landlocked countries in the region. Any delay to construct the Uganda-Rwanda section of the railway line could see Mombasa lose the Rwanda and DR Congo market to its business rival, Dar ess Salaam port. Construction of the railway line is one of the major projects supposed to be fast tracked by Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda under a tripartite arrangement; aiming at boosting intra-regional trade by reducing the cost of transporting goods to and from the sea. Rwanda also needs the electric railway line quickly to reduce the cost of transporting imports and exports—currently the...

New bloc to sell Africa to Africans

AFTER an eight-year negotiation period, the Tripartite Free Trade Area (TFTA) was launched on June 10, bringing together 26 African states with the aim of stimulating intra-African trade by creating a common market. These countries make up three major regional communities — the Southern African Development Community, the East African Community and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa. The free trade area is a long-term project with significant stumbling blocks, including ratification by all 26 participating countries and the implementation of the agreement without causing significant economic disruption for weaker economies. However, the principle of promoting intra-African trade is receiving a lot of attention, along with the development of infrastructure that enables such trade. It is 50 years after the end of European rule in most parts of Africa, and more than a third of Africa’s trade remains with western Europe — historical ties still have a large influence on these markets. This is not surprising given shared languages and cultural connections between many countries. Kenya, Sudan, Uganda, Egypt, Lesotho, Botswana, SA, Namibia, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Tanzania and Swaziland were all former British colonies and make up half of the countries in the TFTA, with most of the remainder having French, Portuguese or German languages and cultures in common. The continent’s largest economy, Nigeria, is not included in TFTA. Once the agreement is fully implemented, the way in which member states benefit will, in many ways, depend on their economic, political, trade and regulatory realities. It will also...

Fuss-free borders lead to more prosperity

A fuss-free border can generate more revenues for governments and offer lower prices for consumers than one that is steeped in bureaucracy. It also encourages the movement of people which in turn inspires entrepenuership. The tourism industry can also gain through the concept of a seamless package tour. In the coming months, citizens of the East African Community (EAC) Partner States will see their presidents trooping to their borders to officially open new One Stop Border Posts (OSBP) facilities. In the dark days before economic integration became a clarion call for more regional prosperity, national borders were like fortresses. More so for business people and general traders intent on importing vital production inputs or exploiting new markets for their goods. The costs involved in both importing and exporting were high, because of the wasted time in duplication of effort. OSBPs will change all that, because persons, vehicles and goods make a single stop to exit one country and enter another. Implementation includes simplification of documents and procedures and greater use of ICT. Many online systems are already in place. For road transporters, instead of spending days at the borders, truckers will complete formalities in a single facility and leave in less than a day. Many of these documents will be received and reviewed electronically before the vehicle arrives. If all is in order and no inspection needed, the vehicle could complete formalities in a few hours and not several days as before. If inspection is needed, it will be done...

Maersk in bid to cut paperwork

MOMBASA, Kenya - Shipping giant, Maersk, is pushing for a cloud-based strategy to reduce documentation processes in shipping and enable global trade writes JOSEPH BURITE. “The idea is to use our expertise around processes and systems around the world to help enable trade,” Managing Director for East Africa Steve Felder said in an interview on Monday. “It is to try and push for digitalization of documentation processes in shipping as an enabler to improve efficiency and lead-time. It will ultimately reduce total logistical costs,” he said by phone from Johannesburg. Partnering with Trademark East Africa, the company will work on the pilot project in the region. “If successful, it has potential to be adopted globally,” Fedler said. Transportation accounts for over 40% in cost of doing business in the region, according to the Shipping Council of East Africa. “To ship a container from Kenya to Holland, a mapping process showed - there are more than 30 individual organizations involved and more than 200 communication interactions. We are looking at how we can develop a cloud based solution to greatly improve this process,” Felder said. Source: East African Business Week

Rwanda-Uganda border post ready

MIRAMA HILLS, Uganda - The Mirama Hills One Stop Border Post (OSBP) linking Rwanda and Uganda is now fully operational on a 24-hour basis, but Ugandan officials at the new facility have been cautioned against asking for bribes writes SHARON KYATUMIISIRE Last week, Alex B. Okello, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Works and Transport said, “This is an investment that has been put up by the government of Uganda to ease transportation of goods in and out of the country. “Let’s make this facility work for the people, including the local community. Avoid bribes here from smugglers and ensure transparency to all users,” he said. He was officiating at the technical handover of the OSBP to Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) in western Uganda. The official commissioning of the two border posts (Kagitumba in Rwanda and Mirama Hills) will be done by President Paul Kagame of Rwanda and Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni later in the year. The refurbished border post contains sections for customs, the immigration department, a goods inspection hall, a clearing agency block and a police post. The facility cost $7.8 million to construct, financed by TradeMark Africa and the government. Work started in July 2013 when the site was handed over to the winning contractors after ab idding process, Dott Services Limited. Dickson Kateshumba, the Commissioner of Customs in URA, said the facility will be open 24 hours. He said all the relevant staff will be under one roof to ensure faster delivery of services. He...

Railways could transform Africa, so why the delay?

The future of Africa might rely on trains. Many regions of the continent, including Southern and East Africa, are emerging with new standard gauge railways and international deals to finance lines that extend from ports to deserts. However, there’s been a myriad of issues with railway lines from Uganda to South Africa. This has left many wondering: Why is it so hard to build a railway in Africa? Sorely Needed One of the major problems facing both communities and the economy in many parts of Africa is simply getting around. Trucks, which supply almost all of the goods to inland regions of the continent are known for belching out black exhaust. In addition, because many are so overloaded, trucks often go outrageously slow, causing difficulties in the distribution of not only food and water, but medication and basic living goods. When this is combined with poor roads, no roads and narrow roads it leads not only to traffic accidents when drivers attempt to overtake trucks, but trips that should take three hours on a standard western-style freeway can take as long as eight hours to complete. Embracing Train Travel These days Uganda, South Sudan, Kenya, Rwanda and South Africa have embraced the idea of train travel and partnered with investors who understand that with vast quantities of natural resources on the continent, the ability to move goods quickly and efficiently could absolutely change the way we do business on a global level. This is one of the reasons that China...