KIGALI, Rwanda - Rwanda’s Ministry of East African Community held the third MINEAC-Private sector breakfast meeting to review the challenges that business people face when using the Central Corridor to and from Dar es Salaam. Present were leading businessmen and women from different companies and sectors that range from transport, logistics, export-import, mining, manufacturing, freight forwarders and shippers who predominately use the central corridor for business. “The Central Corridor is very important for Rwanda’s trade as it accounts for over 60% of the regional trade and therefore all initiatives aimed at improving the central corridor will have a direct impact on transport costs, and competitiveness thus contribute to the reduction of cost of doing business in Rwanda,” Rwanda’s Minister of East African Community Affairs, Amb. Valentine Rugwabiza said. The Minister was speaking during the meeting that focused mainly on “Accelerating the removal of Non-Tariff Barriers along the central corridor”, held last week in Kigali. “This is why last month our leaders came together in Dar-es-Salaam to focus precisely on those two things, how to improve efficiency on the Central corridor and how to work together (governments and business people) to develop the Central corridor,” Rugwabiza said. The Central Corridor is a trade and transport corridor which covers the United Republic of Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Tanzania. “The largest part of the Central corridor is in the United Republic of Tanzania and therefore this is why Tanzania is needed to do a lot in terms of improving...
Rwanda brainstorms Central Corridor
Posted on: April 27, 2015
Posted on: April 27, 2015