Dr.Alfred Kamuzora |
The
Chairman of the CCM Branch in Moscow Dr. Alfred Kamuzora has commended the
President of the United Republic of Tanzania Dr. Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete for
speaking out and ensuring the strong stand of our country to EAC member states;
this is worth to be commended. If many thought otherwise is now clear to
everybody in and out of Tanzania.
President Kikwete |
“Tanzania
will never quit the East African Community and will do everything in its power
to ensure it survives and becomes prosperous despite efforts by Kenya, Rwanda
and Uganda to sideline it”, President Jakaya Kikwete told the Parliament.
President Kikwete told a full House: “We are in the EAC to stay. We have come from so far. We have sacrificed too much to give up now. We will do everything in our power to make sure the EAC survives and achieves its ultimate goal of political federation.”
Mr Kikwete, just back from meetings in South Africa where he met Presidents Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya and Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, said he would engage his colleagues to find out exactly what the problem is. Claims that Tanzania is an impediment to integration were not true, he added, even though they have been repeated several times. On the contrary, he added, Tanzania is an active participant in the integration process and is fulfilling its part of the bargain.
Tanzania has every reason to ask what happened, Mr Kikwete said: “We
met on April 28 this year at a summit in Arusha. Two months later, they met to
discuss how to implement the same issues that we discussed in April without
inviting me. This is a sign that they want to isolate Tanzania. How can we
integrate through isolation?”
President Kikwete told a full House: “We are in the EAC to stay. We have come from so far. We have sacrificed too much to give up now. We will do everything in our power to make sure the EAC survives and achieves its ultimate goal of political federation.”
Also present during the session were
Zanzibar President Ali Mohammed Shein, Vice President Ghalib Bilali, Prime
Minister Mizengo Pinda and Chief Justice Othman Chande.
Mr Kikwete, just back from meetings in South Africa where he met Presidents Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya and Yoweri Museveni of Uganda, said he would engage his colleagues to find out exactly what the problem is. Claims that Tanzania is an impediment to integration were not true, he added, even though they have been repeated several times. On the contrary, he added, Tanzania is an active participant in the integration process and is fulfilling its part of the bargain.
Nevertheless, Tanzania would not agree to
fast-tracking the political federation by leaping over key integration
processes such as the Monetary Union.
Speaking with an intensity rarely seen in
the ever-smiling President, Mr Kikwete told the House that he was puzzled and
deeply saddened by efforts to sideline Tanzania even in issues that have been
discussed all along at the level of the EAC summit meetings. The president said
he had asked himself countless questions as to why Tanzania should be
sidelined.
He added: “Is there a conspiracy to
push Tanzania out of the EAC? Is it that my counterparts from Kenya, Rwanda and
Uganda hate me personally? It is difficult to even imagine the answers.”
President Kikwete addressing the Parliament of The United Republic of Tanzania |
Mr Kikwete’s comments came after Presidents
Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya, Yoweri Museveni of Uganda and Paul Kagame of Rwanda
held three meetings this year, the latest on October 28 in Kigali, where they
agreed to start implementing infrastructure projects, the political federation
and the single customs territory.President Kikwete affirmed that he has never
invited the three tripartite meetings. “They call themselves The Coalition of
the Willing,” Mr Kikwete said. “My question is ‘who, then, is not willing in
the EAC integration process?’ Why don’t they invite us to see if we are willing
or not?”
President Kikwete suggested that Tanzania was
being overlooked because of its avowed stand on the political federation, land,
immigration and movement of labour. He added: “I might be wrong, but my guess
is that we are being sidelined because we insist that we should not jump key
integration steps such as the Monetary Union for the political federation. But,
in this and all other issues, we have the EAC Protocol to back us.”
He disclosed that two or more countries are
allowed to meet over bilateral or trilateral issues but they can do so only to
discuss issues that are not in the EAC protocol or those that have not been
decided upon in the EAC Summit meetings.
The leaders can also decide to take over
implementation of issues agreed upon by the EAC only after permission from the
secretariat. “However, the coalition of the willing has met and deliberated on
issues under the auspices of EAC integration,” Mr Kikwete said. “These include
political federation and the single customs territory.”
Despite the fact that the three countries can
go forward with the infrastructure projects without Tanzania, he added, the
decision to sideline the country was against the spirit of integration since
Tanzania had shown interest in participating in all the projects under
discussion.
There have been expectations that the
Mombasa-Kampala-Kigali standard gauge railways would branch to Tanzania and the
Eldoret-Kampala-Kigali oil pipeline would branch to Mwanza. Tanzania was keen
to invest in the Uganda oil refinery and the electricity issue was agreed
jointly through the EAC Power pool project.In another development, the President yesterday
defended Operation Tokomeza against poachers, saying it was the only way the
government could protect and save animals and other natural resources. He said
the operation has been suspended so the government could work on issues raised
by MPs and wananchi against game warders and other officials.
The operation was unavoidable because of the
current situation and the diminishing elephant and rhino population and
forests.
Nevertheless, the government is working on
comments raised by the public and all dishonest officials will be rooted out.
Said the head of state: “We cannot allow what is going on to continue. We will
be judged by history. We cannot afford this shame, serious measures need to be
taken now.”
He congratulated the Tanzania People’s Defence
Forces soldiers on the role they played in the Democratic Republic of Congo
mission, and added: “Since our soldiers went to Congo, they have been doing
their work effectively and with high discipline as witnessed by the United
Nations and the DRC government and its people.”
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