The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Heed President’s call on inter-trade’

- Tendai Mugabe recently in PORT LOUIS, Mauritius

AFRICA has been urged to take President Mugabe’s advice on the need to open up markets and promote inter-African trade to achieve the desired continenta­l economic integratio­n.

The chief executive of a leading Kenyan firm the Centrum Investment­s, Dr Chris Kirubi told delegates who attended the inaugural African Economic Platform Summit in Mauritius on Monday that Africa was too bureaucrat­ic and should revise its ways of doing business.

“I like us to take stock of what President Mugabe said this morning and I would li ke us all to be supplied with that document,” he said.

“If it is on Google, we will all get it and deliver it to our homes because to me, it was one of the greatest things we got this morning.

“You may not realise that three years ago when ( President) Mugabe was made chairman of the African Union I attacked him and told him, please can you open your market and don’t nationalis­e our businesses.

“He looked at me like I was a strange animal. Today, he spoke the opposite. He was good. He was extremely good in what he said.

“He said we must open markets and we must get South Africa to wake up and stop blocking weaker economies trading in their markets where as they trade a lot in the smaller markets. That was great.”

Dr Kirubi said another setback to Africa’s developmen­t was lack of implementa­tion of its policies.

He said t he continent should also take advantage of its population to harness growth from its vast resources.

“I am asking for action now. Not tomorrow. African Union, you are too slow,” he said.

“Can you get your act together? We start this business today. Africa is poor. We block our markets. There is nothing to protect inside. We are poor, but we don’t want to trade with each other. I would rather trade with the Western world than trade with my colleagues next door.

“At least, (US president Donald) Trump has shown us that they are going to look backward internally to look after themselves, while the Africans will be following them thinking that they are the solution for them.

“You will be lost. Today, if you look at Asia, if you look at China, they are big economical­ly because of their size of population­s, their huge population­s and nobody can ignore them. But what about Africa? We are so disintegra­ted.”

Dr Kirubi said financial institutio­ns such as the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund should not fund African countries that do not promote economic integratio­n.

To achieve an integrated economy, Dr Kirubi said, Africa required focused leadership and promotion of free movement of people and goods.

Said Dr Kirubi: “We need to move. We need to create movement of young

people, to learn together, to create universiti­es — that take students from South Africa, from Namibia, from Congo and they all study degrees

together. By the time they finish that study, they are one, they think the same. Here, we have some of colleagues who speak French, the other guys speak

English and we are divided in the middle like this.

“Who made us battalions for the West to speak in English, battalion for the French speaking French? We are one. Let’s find our language which we can all speak together. We should not be divided because of these languages? They are not our languages.

“Africa must become one. I would li ke to see us reform the African Union itself putting priority where it matters, putting priorities in the economy.”

The AEP, which is a brainchild of the African Union provides a stage for frank engagement­s between African Heads of State and Government, captains of industry and academics on the future of the continent.

AEP was formally launched at the 27th AU Summit in Kigali, Rwanda in 2016 and it also seeks to mobilise alternativ­e resources towards the achievemen­t of the continenta­l developmen­tal blueprint, Agenda 2063.

Meanwhile, President Mugabe returned home yesterday.

He was received at t he Harare Internatio­nal Airport by his t wo deputies, Vice Presidents Emmerson Mnangagwa, and Phelekezel­a Mphoko, Informatio­n, Media and Broadcasti­ng Services Minister Chris Mushohwe, Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Minister Joram Gumbo, State Security Minister Kembo Mohadi, Harare Metropolit­an Minister Miriam Chikukwa, Welfare Services For War Veterans Collaborat­ors, Former Political Detainees & Restrictee­s Minister Tshinga Dube, Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Dr Misheck Sibanda, service chiefs and other senior Government officials.

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