Monday,
December 2nd 2013, By Biketi
Kikechi Kampala,
Uganda:
Uganda President Yoweri Museveni claims western countries are using the two
Kenyan cases at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, to undermine
Africa’s sovereignty. Speaking at the 15th East African Heads of State Summit
in Kampala, Museveni slammed the West for showing contempt for African leaders
and cited the ICC cases against President Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy William
Ruto as an example. “It is dharau and hatari (contempt and danger). That is
what they are doing to our leaders and African countries,” said Museveni at the
Speke Hotel in Munyonyo, Kampala, where President Kenyatta took over as
chairperson of the five countries that make up the East African Community (EAC)
trading bloc. Present at the Press conference were presidents Kenyatta, Jakaya
Kikwete (Tanzania), Pierre Nkurunziza (Burundi) and Paul Kagame (Rwanda).
The five
leaders kept delegates waiting from 10am, when they were scheduled to arrive at
Victoria Hall, to 4pm, when they arrived and hurriedly ran the revised
programme. It was not immediately clear what led to the delay as delegates
waited anxiously, among them young boys brought to sing the East African
anthem. Informal meeting The earlier programme listed among other things an
informal meeting between the presidents. Until this week, President Kikwete had
given the EAC meetings a wide berth since June when Kenyatta, Museveni and
Kagame signed three bilateral agreements in Mombasa, Kampala and Kigali. The
body language of the three presidents appeared to be far from cordial, although
Kenyatta caused laughter when he asked people to stop spreading rumours. “The
EAC remains strong and your leaders commitment to it is unwavering. Let us all
put an end to unnecessary rumour mongering,” Uhuru said.
Museveni
sat on the far left with Uhuru next, followed by fellow leaders Kikwete,
Nkurunziza and Kagame on the far right. Apart from Kenyatta getting the EAC
chair prematurely after Rwanda declined to take it up, Tanzania was also given
the position of rapporteur, which should have gone to Burundi. The EAC job now
gives Kenyatta a busy docket making it increasingly difficult for him to make
frequent appearances at the ICC as earlier demanded by ICC prosecutor Fatou
Bensouda. Speaking before handing over the EAC chairmanship to Uhuru, Museveni
blamed western countries for making difficult for the continent to deal with problems.
“They could not allow African heads of state to land in Libya and you know what
has happened in that country since that time,” said Museveni.
He then
saluted Kenyans for launching a renewed resistance movement against imperialism
citing the way they voted in defiance against external interference in their
internal affairs of African states. “The way the people of Kenya voted was the
second but peaceful Mau Mau resistance,” said Museveni to a thunderous round of
applause in the packed hall. He expressed confidence that what happened in
Kenya was an answer to those showing “dharau and hatari” demands to the leaders
and African countries. But he called for a coordinated response to achieve the
East African political federation. “The East African Community also needs a
political federation to deal with political turmoil in the region and on the
continent,” said Museveni. He warned against the continued delay in its
establishment and suggested the federation could have dealt with political
violence in Kenya and other parts of the region. Museveni said a bigger market
is better for entrepreneurship, but all will depend on marshaling appropriate
technology and financial capital in the region.
Bigger market.
This
would create a bigger market, infrastructure to link the region adequate
facilities to encourage trade and security and guarantee local and global
interests. The East African Community Secretary General Richard Ssesebera
presented what has been achieved towards the realisation of the East African
currency dream. He said the monetary union protocol which the five leaders
signed on Saturday aims to achieve a single currency for the EAC. “It will
launch the region into an irrevocable journey towards a single currency and
will also usher an era of heightened peaceful and financial integration,” he
said. That he asserted will allow east Africans to conduct their business in
local currency across the region. The Council of Ministers has already signed
the framework document for as single customs territory that is expected to come
into effect in 2014.
The
single customs territory will complete the institutional work on a customs
union, remove barriers for goods and cement East Africa as a single trading
bloc. “We will also agree on and internationalise a new generation East Africa
passport and determine the date of its launch,” said Ssesebera. It also emerged
that the use of national identity cards for movement in the region will start
next year in Burundi, Rwanda, Kenya and Uganda. It was not clear why Tanzania
was been exempted from the use of identity cards for free movement of citizens.
Common market “That is an important signal that East Africa is committed to the
implementation of the freedom of movement of East Africans as envisaged in the
common market protocol,” said Ssesebera.
Next
year, the Council of Ministers will complete work on the single visa as well
and work permits. All the leaders expressed satisfaction on how the perennial
barriers that hampered trade and raised the cost of doing business across the
region had been dealt with. “We truly appreciate the removal of road blocks,
rationalisation of weigh bridges, increased efficiency at border posts and at
the port of Mombasa,” said Ssesebera. In her briefing, Phyllis Kandie, the
chairperson of the East African Community Council of Ministers said an
agreement to link all the customs computers of the EAC member states was
finalized and adopted by the ministers. She said talks for a partnership
between the EAC and European Union were at an advanced stage. The same, she
said, had been achieved on talks for a working partnership to create a Comesa,
EAC, and SADEC free trade area. Uganda Deputy Central bank Governor Louis
Kasekende Austin told The Standard that the five countries EAC had already
agreed to the free movement of people, capital and trade between them. “The
monetary union only comes in to facilitate the process,” said Ms Kasekende.
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