Cape Times

Free movement protocol good for SA– Ramaphosa

- African News Agency (ANA)

PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa has urged South Africans to embrace foreign nationals from the continent as the country moves to be part of a pact to enable free movement of people and encourage trade and investment.

Ramaphosa signed a protocol at the AU summit in Kigali, Rwanda recently. South Africa and 43 other countries signed a declaratio­n on establishi­ng the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), which will create the world’s largest free-trade zone after 40 years of negotiatio­ns.

Ramaphosa has already tasked Minister of Internatio­nal Relations Lindiwe Sisulu to work with her Rwandan counterpar­t to lift visa restrictio­ns for Rwandan nationals wishing to travel to South Africa.

Speaking before his departure, Ramaphosa said this did not mean South African nationals would lose job opportunit­ies to foreign nationals, pointing out that they came to the country for various reasons including studying, business, trade and tourism.

“This free-trade agreement that we’ve got should mean people from other countries should come and do business with South Africa.

“We should welcome that because when they come, they come with money. They bring in dollars to invest in South Africa. Some of them come to learn in South Africa,” said Ramaphosa.

“Movement of people does not only mean that people are moving into South Africa to take our people’s jobs. Also, it needs to be seen in another dimension, that we are sending people here (Rwanda) to do business, to trade and to learn. The easy movement of people across borders should never be seen in a negative sense.”

AfCFTA is aimed at deepening African economic integratio­n, promoting agricultur­al developmen­t, food security, industrial­isation and structural economic transforma­tion through single-air continenta­l transport market with free movement of persons, capital, goods and services. The agreement is said to have the potential to create a unified market of $1.2 billion (R14.2bn) and a combined gross domestic product of over$3.5 trillion.

Ramaphosa said his government welcomed the “historic moment” that had been dreamt of by the founding fathers of the AU, saying South Africa was totally pledging itself to opening up trade by signing the declaratio­n.

“We are part of this process of opening up Africa for trade. All that is holding us back from signing the actual agreement is our own consultati­on process,” he said. “So we are really going the clean-up process of ensuring that everybody is on board.

“As far as we are concerned as South Africa, we are very much part of it. The agreement, therefore, is very much alive, it’s not dead in the water. We as South Africa want free trade in Africa because we are an important player on the African continent.”

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