Monday, 28 October 2013

Riddle of Tanzania and Burundi as EAC bloc leaders meet

By DANIEL K. KALINAKI in Kigali | Monday, October 28   2013 at  19:26

Tanzania's President Jakaya Kikwete. PHOTO | FILE 
President Jakaya Kikwete of Tanzania and Pierre Nkurunziza of Burundi stayed out of the loop of the third infrastructure summit in Kigali, Rwanda but their absence loomed large in the conference room.
Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni told journalists in a brief press conference Monday that talk of a “coalition of the willing” involving his country, Rwanda and Kenya was inaccurate since the three were only discussing infrastructure projects along the northern corridor and would involve Tanzania once discussions moved to the southern corridor.
However, the final communiqué after the meeting of the three heads of state did not include an update on efforts to fast-track the East African political federation, a matter whose discussion outside the East African Community Tanzanian officials have expressed concern over.
At the last infrastructure summit in Kenya's coastal city of Mombasa, Uganda was tasked to spearhead efforts to fast-track the political federation and a committee headed by the country’s Internal Affairs minister Aronda Nyakairima met in Kampala this month to start the writing of a draft constitution.
They had been expected to provide an update to the Rwanda summit.
Gen. Nyakairima declined to comment on the exercise, while Kenya’s East African Affairs, Commerce and Tourism Cabinet Secretary Phyllis Kandie said talk of a political federation was a “side-show”, which had not been discussed by the ministers or the heads of state in Kigali.
Tanzania’s ministry of East African Cooperation recently issued a statement warning that the tri-lateral talks among Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda were against the EAC protocol.
A private visit
The statement argued that all EAC member states had to endorse the regional infrastructure deals signed by presidents Kenyatta, Museveni and Kagame, otherwise they contravened Article 7(1) (e) of the EAC protocol.
“Even though this Article allows member countries to enter bi-lateral or tri-lateral agreements, it is a must that issues under consideration for implementation under this arrangement are fully discussed and agreed upon by all member countries,” the statement from the ministry said.
However, President Museveni Monday said he was unaware of complaints from Tanzania about the trilateral agreements.
“Unless I get an official letter from the state, I consider what I see in the press as lies,” he said in response to a journalist’s question.
Tanzanian diplomats are understood to have expressed their concerns about being left out of the regional plans through the Council of Ministers.
Officials in Dar es Salaam say they had not been invited to participate in the Coalition of the Willing and were expected to raise the matter more directly at the next EAC Heads of State Summit in Kampala in late November.
Burundi sent a ministerial delegation to the last summit in Mombasa and President Nkurunziza visited with President Kenyatta a few days later on what was said to be a private visit.
It could not be confirmed whether Bujumbura or Dar es Salaam had been invited to the Kigali summit.

SOURCE: AFRICA REVIEW