Category: In the Media

DAILY NATION: Kenya still bleeding from tax evasion

PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy Daily Nation

By

Edwin Okoth

Kenya is losing up to Sh62 billion every year in taxes as companies and individuals use tax loopholes to avoid paying their pound of flesh.

International corporate tax abuse and private tax evasion is bleeding the country close to half its health budget an amount it can use to pay more than 250,000 nurses for a whole year according to the Tax Justice Network.

The November report says the country ranks poorly in managing financial secrecy, affording evaders an opportunity to get away with money that can be put into better use.

The country was ranked seven in Africa for providing conducive ground for tax evasion with its laws and financial systems being programmed to abet global corporate tax abuse and financial secrecy.

The loophole seems to be working against the East African economic giant that now loses more than what Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Ghana bleed combined.

TJN chief executive Alex Cobman said such systems that allow for massive tax losses are not broken by mistake but programmed to work in the same manner.

“Under pressure from corporate giants and tax haven powers like the Netherlands and the UK’s network, our governments have programmed the global tax system to prioritise the desires of the wealthiest corporations and individuals over the needs of everybody else,” Mr Cobman said.

Read More

THE EAST AFRICAN: EA fights tax cheats as virus takes heavy toll on revenues

PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy The East African

By

Njiraini Muchira

East African tax agencies are working on measures to deter tax evasion and avoidance even as economies struggle to remain afloat.

The regional economies are bogged down by loss of jobs, low production and growing external debts over the past nine months and face a difficult challenge of collecting revenues.

Regional tax commissioners general attending the 48th East African revenue authorities general meeting last week on Wednesday, said they are implementing a raft of measures to contain tax evasion and avoidance in the midst of substantial underperformance of revenue collections and ballooning expenditure.

East African Community partner states have recorded massive decline in revenues with the quarter from July to September being the worst with revenue growth ranging from -44.9 percent to 2.1 percent.

“This was unprecedented bearing in mind that the revenues have on average been growing at double digits,” said James Githii Mburu, Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) Commissioner-General who was hosting a virtual meeting with revenue authority commissioner generals.

He said the greatest decline was registered in May, when countries put in health restrictions that shut down economic activities.

To seal revenue loopholes, the tax agencies have resolved to adopt a common approach to address base erosion and profit shifting, and illicit financial flows within the EAC.

The authorities intend to counter tax evasion through invoice mispricing and tax avoidance through profit shifting by introducing transfer pricing rules to ensure fairness and accuracy of transaction pricing.

Eliminating base erosion and profit shifting could boost tax revenue by an estimated 2.7 per cent of GDP.

“The Rwandan Cabinet has approved guidelines on transfer pricing and we intend to publish them soon,” said Pascal Ruganintwali Bizimana, Commissioner-General of the Rwanda Revenue Authority

“In Tanzania we have developed transfer pricing regulations and guidelines that we are using to monitor abuse. We want taxpayers to abide by the rules,” said Alfred Mregi, commissioner for large taxpayers at the Tanzania Revenue Authority.

Read More

PEOPLE DAILY: House urged to probe double taxation treaties

PHOTO CREDITS: People Daily

By

Steve Umidha

Tax Justice Network Africa (TJNA) and the East African Tax and Governance Network (EATGN) will move to Parliament to have the State rescind tax treaties it signed with Singapore and Barbados, barely a month after effectively petitioning the matter against the National Treasury.

On Monday, the two civil groups said there was need to evaluate both tax treaties Kenya signed with the two countries as they are likely to negatively affect Kenyan tax law.

Singapore and Barbados are on the verge of ratifying double tax treaties with Kenya, a decision that continue to face opposition from various quarters.

Revenue losses

Such a decision, the two groups added, could expose the country into future revenue losses if it is to be ratified in its current form.

The two countries are considered by anti-corruption and global anti-money laundering agencies as some of the murkiest financial centres in the world besides Mauritius and other well-known tax havens.

Read More

TAX TRANSCRIPT: NTV Business Redefined Show on the Kenyan Double Taxation Agreements with Singapore and Barbados

(PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy NATION)

Julians Amboko of NTV Business Redefined hosted Alvin Mosioma, Executive Director of Tax Justice Network Africa (TJNA), and Lena Onyango, an advocate and specialist on tax matters, to discuss the Kenyan Double Taxation Agreements with Barbados and Singapore.

JULIANS AMBOKO: Tonight, we are focusing on the pertinent subject of double taxation treaties.

Double Tax Treaties are agreements reached between tourist jurisdictions rather allocating tax rights and ensuring there is no imposition of tax on the same income by multiple jurisdictions.

Such treaties seek to catalyse trade and investment flows between two jurisdictions.

This notwithstanding the treaties are open to manipulation through practices such as treaty shopping by briefcase companies.

Kenya is currently pursuing double tax treaties with Singapore and Barbados and tonight, we’ll take a deep dive into this with Alvin Mosioma who is the Executive Director at the Tax Justice Network Africa and Lena Onyango, who is an advocate and specialist on tax matters.

Welcome on set and just to kick it off, Alvin, I was reading the TJNA analysis on this matter.

The title is Trick or Treaty, why is this the case?

ALVIN MOSIOMA:  Well as you rightly said in the beginning, really, the purpose of double tax agreements is to help ensure that companies are not being taxed twice. 

On one side  where they’re registered and on the other side where they’re doing their business operations, but what our researchers have shown is that many a times  these double tax agreements result  to double (non) taxation so the  companies find tricks to basically beat the system and shift profits  away from the jurisdictions where they’re operating.

Therefore, we have been very critical about particularly the double tax agreements that are being negotiated and signed with these jurisdictions that are g considered as e tax havens.

AMBOKO: Alright, and crossing over to Lena clearly there is an issue of merit and demerits here, from your assessment, what do you think outweighs the other in this case?

LENA ONYANGO: Coming from a government and private sector perspective, the whole idea of double tax treaties as you have correctly defined, is to avoid instances where either a person is taxed twice or the same income is taxed twice in different jurisdictions .

Now the advantage, and I believe the whole intention, of a double tax treaty is to foster trade between contracting entities  which are between two party states.

Over and above fostering trade, they encourage foreign direct investment from foreign jurisdictions into Kenya.

The reason being if they’re pumping money into the Kenyan economy, they will not [like to] be taxed both in Kenya and their jurisdiction of the residence of the holding company or their parent company.

From a business perspective, I think double tax treaties open avenues that were probably not there and it does not necessarily come across for goods [alone], it also cuts across the service sector so double tax treaties are favourable and are actually a good move by the government in terms of trying to widen the tax treaty network in Kenya.

AMBOKO: Coming back to you, Alvin we have a precedent in this country where not too far back, the double taxation treaty with Mauritius was nullified by the high court thanks to your organisation.

Why is this the case and are we in trouble again with what we are pursuing right now with Singapore and Barbados?

MOSIOMA: Yes, we are most likely to be in trouble again.  The case we filed in court against the Kenya-Mauritius double tax agreement was really built on two foundations.

One, we were making an argument that the due process of the law was not followed.

There is a very clear laid out procedure in terms of what governments should be doing when they are negotiating and signing double tax agreements.

Some of these provisions, for example, in the  new constitution [stipulates] that:  parliament needs to be involved  in the ratification process; there should be measures for public participation; the government needs to ensure that they are conducting sufficient cost-benefit analysis in order to argue and say [any] treaty with a particular country make sense.

In the case of Mauritius, we were convinced, and the court saw it right, that this (procedure used in negotiating and signing the Mauritius double tax agreements) was not the case. We [argued] and indeed we were right that the treaty with Mauritius was opening up the country for significant resource leakage both through the different avenues of abuse be it treaty shopping, transfer mispricing, or round tripping where you find Kenyan entities moving off to Mauritius  to take advantage of particular  provisions in that particular treaty.

In the case of Singapore and Barbados, we are very critical of this and we have also made our submissions to the government on the technical aspects.

[Nonetheless,] I also would like to add that we commend the Kenyan government in this instance in terms of at least going out of its way with these particular treaties to consult the public.

This is really, to my knowledge, the very first time that the government has taken the step to collect views from the public in terms of what do they feel about this particular treaty.

Nevertheless, in essence, I think my real question is why Barbados? I mean a country which has got about 300,000 people or why Singapore? Which is ranked as number six as one of the most secretive and one of the largest tax havens in the world.

Why these jurisdictions?

This is especially critical in the context of Kenya committing to the African (Continental) Free Trade Area.

We should be looking at focusing on signing double tax agreement with jurisdictions that we’re actually doing business with like Uganda, in the East African Community (EAC) and others.

I think this should be having more priority than focusing on jurisdictions that are largely tax havens which are in my sense are very open to abuse.

AMBOKO:  But Alvin just to be fair to the government and as I bring in Lena on this point we might not know much about Barbados in terms of the trade volumes because of scarcity of data but we do know something about Singapore.

I mean exports worth about KES 2 billion, imports about KES 6.8 billion, over the last two years. We’ve seen an increasing partnership between Kenya and Singapore in terms of data transfer as well as investment flows. Clearly there seems to be a case here for an agreement with Singapore.

Lena what are your thoughts on this?

ONYANGO: Amboko I agree with you on that.

There has been a substantial increase in investments from Singapore to Kenya that I’m personally aware of [business] now doing affordable housing projects in Kenya.

I think let’s not paint DTAs to be a bad thing in the sense that we cannot pick on a country like Barbados just by virtue of having a population of about 300,000 vis a vis the Kenyan population but I believe between Kenya and Barbados there are certain trade activities, and correct me if I’m wrong but I understand that the key intention of the government entering into a DTA with Barbados was to drive the financial services sector.

The government is really keen on having Kenyan financial institutions setting up and operating with Barbados and that creates also bigger opportunities from a Kenyan perspective.

So the DTAs [should not be perceived as working] against Kenya but I’m also looking at it from the perspective that it has opened doors for Kenyan institutions to set up in other jurisdictions and therefore we’re growing our economy and of course the Barbados economy benefits as well.

AMBOKO: Alright and I’m sure Alvin you have a rebuttal to that but even before we get into that just to throw something at you.

I was reading the critique of the TJNA around this whole issue and one of the issues you raised and recommendations really tabling is the matter of limitations of benefits.

To the best of my understanding this is catered for when you read the income tax act Section 41 clearly spelling out this issue.

If you consider that all these tax treaties are coming post January 2015, when the income tax act rather came into force, don’t you think this matter is addressed?

MOSIOMA: Okay I’ll respond to that later but let me first address the question of investment through Singapore, the one you listed earlier about investments that are being channelled through Singapore and Mauritius.

What you note is that in real terms many of these jurisdictions that are considered tax havens have positioned themselves globally, and have designed their domestic tax laws deliberately as conduit hubs.

So in essence what I’m saying is that it’s not rich Barbadians that will be channelling their investments to Kenya, it’s not Singaporean entities that will be channelling their investments in Kenya but most likely you would find is Chinese investments, American investments, German investments.

We have seen there is evidence for example in the last expose of the Paradise Papers where you found a treaty that had been signed between Senegal and Mauritius.

Canadian companies were using that as an avenue to move to Mauritius, set up base there and then use it to come into Senegal as a Mauritian entity.

This is what we are literally seeing and this likely what’s going to happen when you have these treaties being signed with these jurisdictions, when they themselves don’t have substantive economic muscle but are positioning themselves as conduit countries to channel investment.

If you look at Mauritius, it is really marketing itself globally as the so-called gateway into the continent which in my own sense is not really a gateway but providing a getaway car for tax planning and tax avoidance.

To the second question you raise about limitation of benefits, in principle yes, a limitation of benefits can act as a very good instrument to be able to prevent tax abuse in a treaty network.

However, this only applies in cases where the substantive investment is coming from that particular jurisdiction.

For example if you were to have a situation where Kenya is signing a treaty with Germany and the investments are being channelled directly from Germany, as it were foreign direct means coming directly from that particular country, then the limitations of benefit would work.

Yet when you have the situations where the treaty that is being negotiated and being signed is with a jurisdiction that is being considered a tax haven we must take note that tax havens really provide two things, Julians, tax havens provide secrecy and they provide low taxation.

They provide incentives that encourage companies to use those jurisdictions as conduits for channelling investments into other jurisdictions and taking advantage of the particular provisions of those double tax agreements.

So, in essence we are not against double tax agreements per say, actually we have been campaigning and pushing for the Kenyan government to encourage the colleagues in Tanzania to sign the East Africa Double Tax Agreement.

I think that in the context of the Africa Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) we feel that the Kenyan government should encourage a broader treaty network because true it creates an enabling environment for investment but we are critical of treaties that are being signed by jurisdictions that are considered tax havens.

This is the case with Singapore, and it is also the case with Barbados.

(3 MINUTES BREAK)

JULIANS AMBOKO: Welcome back to business redefined.

Tonight, we are focusing on the issue of double taxation treaties between Kenya and other jurisdictions particularly the pursuit of such treaties with Singapore and Barbados.

On set I have Alvin Mosioma from the TJNA and Lena Onyango who is a tax analyst and also legal professional focusing on the subject.

Before the break we were discussing several issues including some of the challenges which were presented as well as opportunities.

Lena, on the issue of Singapore and Barbados being perceived as tax havens and could lead to revenue seepage, many are curious to know to what degree would the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FACTA) which has been enforced in the United States play a role in terms of disclosure of some of these ventures where a lot of concern is coming about?

What could this translate into for a country like Kenya?

LENA ONYANGO: Amboko, FATCA is the US mechanism for getting financial information about its residents in other jurisdictions.

It is similar to the EU Savings Trade that they call EU-STD. Meanwhile Kenya has signed up to the automatic exchange of information a project that has been driven by the OECD and the G20.

Basically, the meaning, or the effect of this is that financial information between different countries will now be automatically exchanged annually between the revenue authorities.

If you look up the double tax treaties for both Barbados and Singapore, they provide for exchange of information.

Moreover, with Kenya being a signatory to the automatic exchange information mechanism then that means that if there is any person who moves money from Kenya to a financial institution which could be a bank or a broker either in Singapore or Barbados then that information would be relayed to the KRA.

KRA will therefore be able to compare what declaration the taxpayer has made in Kenya vi-a-vis the information that they have obtained and will be able to carry out investigations on that.

So, I’m not really worried about the DTAs between Singapore and Barbados in so far as illicit financial flows is concerned reason being [that Kenya is obligated are over and above them [thanks to being a] signatory to the automatic exchange of information.

This is required for companies that have cross border transactions, meaning, if a Kenyan company trades with a Singaporean company or a company based in Barbados there will be a transfer pricing policy, that KRA approves after it is shared with them.

This ensures that whatever inter-company transactions take place, the price at which those transactions are charged then will have to be based under the arm’s length principle.

This means that they have to be reasonably priced and I believe Alvin can confirm that in the case of illicit financial flows about 80% of it is through transfer mispricing.

So [with these measures]  I feel that as a country [if we utilise the existing legislation to tackle]  the concept of transfer pricing legislation [together with] automatic exchange of information  then don’t think we should be worried about the issue of illicit profits transfers from Kenya.

AMBOKO: Alright Alvin I mean clearly Lena and I seem to be on the same page. We don’t seem too bothered as far as this issue of illicit flows is concerned, even the provisions of FATCA, what’s your take on this matter?

ALVIN MOSIOMA: Well I first I agree with Lena that transfer mispricing, as it were, is the largest avenue for resource leakage for the  phenomena of illicit financial flows.

What we note is that countries either don’t have the capacity across the continent or they don’t have sufficient laws in place to be able to address the challenges that are related to transfer mispricing 

Above all that if you really look at the concept of transfer mispricing, today we live in a world where over 80% of transactions) through  intellectual property, through online transactions, the Uber’s, the two trillion dollar Amazon which is really doing transactions online the question of transfer pricing becomes really difficult to tackle.

This because there’s no real market value for particular services and there’s no particular brand value. What is the price of what Google as a product or as a brand? What is the market value?

So, it becomes really difficult to tackle that question of transfer mispricing because of the global shift we are seeing towards trade in services as opposed to trade in goods.

On the question of automatic exchange of information here I would like to differ because what you note is that the framework of automatic exchange of information was a setup to [only really] tackle tax evasion.

[If you look at] the terms of how it is framed in the founding documents they are talking about tax jurisdictions, and administration(s) exchanging information to be able to fight the illegal tax evasion.

For tax avoidance, therefore, I don’t believe that automatic exchange of information is the appropriate tool to address this kind of profit shifting.

Here I would recommend the country by country reporting which I think has been a provision whose conversation has been started under the OECD.

However, what we are seeing is that that thresholds that have been put for companies to be able to report on the country by country basis are too high to be useful for developing countries particularly and more importantly in Africa.

So, yes, though I think that automatic exchange of information in double tax agreement are important in determining transfer pricing relations that are being put in place; I still believe that there are significant  loopholes open to abuse.

Ultimately in the efforts for countries to generate more revenue these double tax agreements are more bad than they’re good for the country.

AMBOKO: Still within the context of exchange of information and of course the transparency within which this will take place, Lena looking at this within the context of the conventional mutual administrative assistance agreement, do you feel we have another safeguard as far as that is concerned regarding the concerns being raised by Alvin?

ONYANGO: I think you cannot take a one-way approach; we have the DTA’s, whose transfer pricing the guidelines in Kenya which are enforced in the country.

Over and above that Kenya has signed up to the automatic exchange of information this is now, of course, the common reporting standard together with the [OECD] framework around it.

So if you also look at the development in terms of legislation, the commissioner now has a right, if [it is deemed] that a tax payer has just made an arrangement for purposes of avoiding tax, to initiate the penalties that are double the tax that would have otherwise been paid.

To build up on that if, even on a domestic front, there are these punitive measures that have not been [utilised yet] to discourage this kind of arrangement, then I this this is a good reason why I believe the that provision iss sort of good,

It is [also] not a blanket provision for abuse by the commissioner if you, Amboko, probably shifted 100 million to Barbados then you’ll be automatically [liable] to pay double the tax, [because it must seek out] what was the intention [of the transfer]?

It must ask, what was the commercial benefit that you were going for, thinking about or wanted to obtain by investing in that other country.

For us in the legal front we have also noticed this a shift in decisions of the court especially in the UK [that in as much as tax avoidance is legal, it becomes an abuse of treaty if you plan your affairs without a valid commercial perspective or without having a commercial justification for it}.

So, there must be a definite need for commercial justification when taxpayers are making these kinds of arrangements.

AMBOKO: [….]

Meanwhile, there is a gentleman asking why Alvin has evaded the question on the limitations of benefits. Does it apply to all transactions in a DTA irrespective of FDI coming in or not, what’s your take on this Alvin?

MOSIOMA: So as I said earlier, limitations of benefit provisions are effective in situations where the investments are directly coming from the country of origin, the country where those investments are coming from and not a conduit country.

In a situation where, as I said earlier, with a particular focus on tax havens what you find is that the investments are channelled from country A through country B before they land in country C and that [is clear from the] example I gave of the Paradise Papers expose of mining companies.

We even had the case in Uganda of an oil company that was using Mauritius as a conduit to invest into there, yet the company actually came from the UK.

So, in situations like that when you find that the domestic law of these tax havens is designed in a way that it encourages companies from the investing countries to use them as a conduit to invest in other countries that is when limitations of benefits becomes ineffective in my own opinion.

AMBOKO: Okay, I have just about a minute to go Lena very quickly your closing remarks

ONYANGO: Just to close Amboko first thank you for this opportunity, I’m really happy that as a country we are having this conversation.

I feel that there’s not much awareness around the effects of double tax agreements and as Alvin has stated, the whole idea of public participation should not just be limited to stakeholders.

Secondly, parliament should also be involved; members of the public should also be more proactive because these are decisions and agreements that are going to have an impact on them one way or the other.

So my parting shot is just to say I feel Kenyans need to be more proactive on some of these things and with the tax justice network and the KRA. I feel a lot of awareness needs to be raised over the impact of such kind of agreements.

AMBOKO: Okay, Alvin very briefly your closing remarks.

MOSIOMA: I fully agree with the final remarks from Lena.

I think that there’s really need for more public participation in this process because ultimately it is about where the money that is financing development is going to come from.

What we see across Africa and even in the case of Kenya is that there’s a huge shift of the taxation burden to low income earners while those that are in the top categories are getting away with it because they have found ways of playing with the law and finding loopholes particularly in the double tax agreements to shift their profits and minimise their tax obligations.

It is for this reason that we feel that public participation in the tax formulation processes is very instrumental and that’s the work that TJNA was established to do.

AMBOKO: Alright, and those comments by Alvin take us to the close of Business Redefined.

The following conversation was edited for repetition, proper grammar, and improved meaning for purposes of clarity.

Read More

DAILY NATION: Take care as you ink double taxation deals

(PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy NATION)

By

Leonard Wanyama

What you need to know:

  • Singapore and Mauritius are among the top 20 most secretive, aggressive and extensive jurisdictions that help multinationals escape paying taxes.
  • DTAs may also serve as a channel for tax avoidance.
  • Kenya has pursued 48 DTAs since Independence, 14 of them in recent times.

A most perturbing government initiatives is the pursuit of double taxation agreements (DTAs) without an implementation policy. This leaves the country exposed to the risk of having its domestic revenue mobilisation efforts undermined by illicit financial flows, especially when negotiated with known tax havens. Recently, the National Treasury asked for public submissions on a DTA with Singapore and has been actively working to operationalise another with Mauritius that had been held up by a court case filed by Tax Justice Network Africa (TJNA).

Read More

THE SENTRY: The Golden Laundromat – The Conflict Gold Trade from Eastern Congo to the United States and Europe

(PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy THE SENTRY)

Key Findings

  • An investigation by The Sentry raises significant concerns that gold mined from conflict areas in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (“Congo”) is reaching international markets, including the supply chains of major U.S. companies and in products that consumers use every day.
  • Documents reviewed and interviews conducted by The Sentry raise serious concern that the corporate network controlled by Belgian tycoon Alain Goetz has refined illegally-smuggled conflict gold from eastern Congo at the African Gold Refinery (AGR) in Uganda and then exported it through a series of companies to the United States and Europe, potentially including Amazon, General Electric (GE), and Sony.
  • According to documents reviewed by The Sentry, AGR exported approximately $377 million in gold in 2017 to an apparent affiliate of the Belgian gold refinery Tony Goetz NV, based in Dubai. Numerous sources interviewed by The Sentry identified AGR as sourcing conflict gold from Congo. AGR denies this and maintains that it is committed to refraining from any action that contributes to the financing of conflict.

Read More

PRESS RELEASE: Increasing Participation of Civil Society Organizations and Journalists

(PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy MilleCollinesInfos)

Could a multisectoral collaboration alter the illicit outflows narrative?

With the onslaught of the global coronavirus pandemic, there are concerns that the scale and scope of Illicit Financial Flows (IFFs) could be increasing. While authorities focus on the pandemic, other actors should not be distracted. Tax Justice Network Africa (TJNA) has embraced innovation to remain on course and will be hosting a virtual capacity building activity for tax justice advocates in Africa.

Themed Tax Justice Advocacy: increasing participation of Civil society organisations and journalists through capacity building, the 7 th edition of the International Tax Justice Academy (ITJA) brings together participants from the entire continent drawn from the civil society, media, trade unions and academia. Africa is endowed with significant natural resource wealth and with good husbandry could finance its own development.

There however exist illegal cross border movement of money and capital that threaten the continent’s sustainable development and have been growing every year.

If there has been a growing recognition of threat that Illicit Financial Flows (IFFs) pose on the continent’s integrity and stability of its financial system in normal times, how about during a pandemic? Africa is home to the world’s largest arable landmass; second largest and longest rivers (the Nile and the Congo); and its second largest tropical forest. According to a study by the African Development Bank Group, the total value added of its fisheries and aquaculture sector alone is estimated at USD 24 billion. In addition, about 30% of all global mineral reserves are found in Africa.

Read More

SMART24TV: To protect its sugar sector, Kenya blocks imports from Uganda

(PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy SMART24TV)

Dealers in sugarcane products are facing a precarious future after Kenya announced it was banning imports from Uganda.

Kenya’s Agriculture Cabinet Secretary Peter Munya this past week said they are trying to prop up their struggling sugar sector, which has suffered due to competition from the neighbouring markets.

As of now, trucks ferrying sugarcane to Kenya have queued up at the Busia border point, which has led to signicant losses, considering the ban was announced abruptly.

Some have been at the border for as many as five days.

Uganda started exporting sugarcane to Kenya, following bilateral talks between President Museveni and Uhuru Kenyatta, in which it was agreed that Uganda sells its surplus sugarcane to the Busia Sugar factory in western Kenya.

Although the agreement came with stringent measures, Uganda’s out-growers had strived to fulfil them up to date. According to the deal, Uganda would export between 36,000 tonnes and 90,000 tonnes of sugar annually to Kenya.

The minister of trade, industry and cooperatives recently said that Uganda has a good sugar market with a surplus of 48,000 metrics tonnes. In April, Uganda scored a deal to supply brown sugar to Tanzania.

“Our Sugar Industry comprises of 11 functional Sugar Mills producing 510,000 metric tonnes and consumption is 360,000 metric tonnes per annum. Surplus is 150,000 metric tonnes and sufficient for export,” the minister said.

Read More

WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES: 500 million Christians urge G20 to fix broken economic architecture

(PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES)

Four global organizations representing some 500 million Christians have written an urgent letter to G20 leaders, calling for them to leave behind the current broken financial architecture and promote a truly just and sustainable recovery.

The letter, sent 13 July, is from the World Council of Churches, World Communion of Reformed Churches, Lutheran World Federation and Council for World Mission.

The organizations express “profound concern” over how COVID-19  and the related economic crisis have continued to destroy lives and livelihood around the world. “To date this has resulted in more than half a million deaths, massive unemployment, increase of debts, poverty, and inequality in many parts of the world.”

And the spread of COVID-19 continues to accelerate.

“This moment offers us an unprecedented opening to collectively examine the current order and to ‘build back better’ a different system that nurtures the health, wellbeing and resilience of communities and the planet for generations to come,” urge the organizations. “Here we would like to underline that COVID-19 recovery measures and policies must be compatible with urgent and ambitious action on the climate crisis.”

Read More

WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES: WCC, WCRC, LWF, CWM letter to G20 finance ministers

(PHOTO CREDITS: Courtesy WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES)

The Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors of the Group of 20 (G20)

Your Excellencies:

Our organizations, the World Council of Churches (WCC), World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC), Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and Council for World Mission (CWM), have followed with profound concern how the COVID-19 pandemic and the related economic crisis have continued to destroy lives and livelihood around the world. To date this has resulted in more than half a million deaths, massive unemployment, increase of debts, poverty, and inequality in many parts of the world.

We want to express our appreciation for the G20’s prompt efforts to address the crises by offering fiscal measures to support public health response, temporary debt relief for the poorest countries, and emergency financing facilities as agreed at your last meeting on 15 April 2020. We also welcome the G20’s recognition of the necessity for governments to work together in a coordinated and coherent manner. At the same time, we think that more can and ought to be done to mitigate human suffering and promote a truly just and sustainable recovery.

As you are well aware, the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated how many countries are ill-equipped and poorly resourced to respond to an emergency of this scale and magnitude. It has exposed the deeper crisis which is a result of the current economic and development model, namely the exploitation of resources in a manner that destroys the planet and leaves the majority of people in poverty.

Read More
Loading...