Press Release

EAC to unveil US$ 20M Private Sector Fund in November 2015

The East African Community will in November this year launch a Private Sector Fund with the aim of deepening the participation of the private sector in the EAC integration process.

EAC Secretary-General (SG) Amb. Dr Richard Sezibera said the US$ 20 million fund would be launched by the regional economic bloc’s Heads of State at their Summit in November 2015.

Dr Sezibera said private sector firms from all the five EAC Partner States were making contributions to the fund, adding that the EAC was working in close collaboration with the East African Business Council (EABC) on the initiative.

Dr Sezibera thanked the private sector for responding favourably to the Community’s proposal to set up the fund.

The SG further disclosed that the EAC had signed agreements with the European Union under which the Community will receive 85 million euros, in addition to financing for infrastructure and other development projects.

The SG was addressing the opening session of the EAC’s Pre-Budget Conference for the Financial Year 2016/2017 at the EAC Headquarters in Arusha, Tanzania. Present at the function were Uganda’s Minister for EAC Affairs Mr Shem Bageine and Dr Odette Nyiramilimo, Chairperson of the General Purpose Committee at the East African Legislative Assembly (EALA).

The two-day conference is being attended by MPs from EALA, EAC employees, delegates from the Partner States, as well as representatives of EAC institutions.

Dr Sezibera proposed that the Community focuses on the six priority interventions during the 2016/2017 Financial Year, namely:

  1. Full implementation of the EAC Single Customs Territory;
  2. Enhanced implementation of the EAC Common Market Protocol especially with regard to: negotiating additional commitments and; interconnectivity of border immigration systems and procedures across the Partner States;
  3. Development of cross-border infrastructure and harmonisation of laws, policies and standards in the respective sub-sectors; implementation of a liberalised EAC Air Space; enhanced implementation of computerised weather prediction models; and, implementation of a One Network Area in telecommunications;
  4. Development and harmonisation of legislation, regulations and standards to establish an EAC Energy Common Market, including work on an EAC Energy Exchange and finalise remaining energy inter-connectors across borders;
  5. 4th Heads of State Retreat on Infrastructure Development and Financing; and
  6. EAC Peace and Security Initiatives

The outcome of the conference will be presented to the 32nd meeting of the EAC Council of Ministers that will be held from 10–15th August in Arusha.

In her remarks, Dr Nyiramilimo called for increased allocation of funds to the Social and Productive Sectors, adding that the sectors were at the heart of the East Africans and socio-economic development of the region.

“We urge you all to focus on priorities that touch on the lives of East Africans so that the integration process is a reality we can identify with. I am sure the Secretariat will support us all in this as we make efforts to take integration and its benefits to East Africans”, said Dr Nyiramilimo.

Second Meeting of The Regional Steering Committee for African Centres of Excellence held in Kampala, Uganda

The Regional Steering Committee for African Centres of Excellence (ACE II) held its second meeting on 27–28th July 2015 in Kampala, Uganda to consider the ACE II Protocol for Assessment of Proposals and Call for Proposals.

The two documents are paramount for the launch of the project and were approved by the Regional Steering Committee. The Committee resolved that the Call for Proposals be launched by 31st July 2015.

The Call for Proposal shall be posted on ACE II website (www.ace2.iucea.org) and IUCEA website (www.iucea.org), advertised in the East African newspaper and in local newspapers of the participating countries. Higher education institutions from the participating countries are invited to develop and submit proposals to the Regional Facilitation Unit (RFU) for selection as centres of excellence.

The ACE II project aims at promoting regional specialisation among participating universities within areas that address particular regional development challenges, and to strengthen the capacities of these universities to deliver high quality training and applied research in areas of priority to socio-economic development as identified by the participating countries.

The set priorities are Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM); agricultural sciences, health and medical sciences; Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) and quality education; and applied Statistics.

IUCEA was selected to be the Regional Facilitation Unit (RFU) for ACE II by a Regional Steering Committee (RSC) which sat in April 2015.

RSC is responsible for overseeing the implementation of the project / programme. As a Regional Facilitating Unit, IUCEA will specifically facilitate monitoring and evaluation, coordinate capacity building initiatives for the selected centres of excellence and share good practices across the participating countries.

The RFU will also be responsible for managing the selection and evaluation process of the project’s regional competition as well as other preparatory activities, such as communication and dissemination of the project.

Ten countries are participating in the project namely, Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Malawi, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

JAMAFEST takes EAC Outreach Programmes to Universities in Nairobi

The 2nd Edition of the East African Community Jumuiya ya Afrika Mashariki Utamaduni Festival (JAMAFEST) entered day four on Wednesday at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC) Nairobi, Kenya, with several activities taking place.

The theme of Day 4 was: Fusing the Old and the Current into One as we unravel the way forward.

A Visual Arts Exhibition was held at the KICC Courtyard with traditional sports and children’s games taking place at the KICC lawns. There were also various performances by cultural troupes from the EAC Partner States taking place at the KICC’s Tsavo Ballroom.

As a strategy to reach out to university students and the youth in Nairobi, dance performances with messages on EAC integration by artists from different Partner States were organised at Kenyatta University, University of Nairobi and the Technical University of Kenya.

The JAMAFEST Symposium 2015 themed Unleashing the economic potential of the creative and cultural industries of EAC was held at the KICC Amphitheatre.

While officiating at the official opening of the symposium, the EAC Deputy Secretary-General in charge of Productive and Social Sectors, Hon. Jesca Eriyo, said it was encouraging to know that there was a wide spectrum of stakeholders interested in the development of arts and culture, emphasising the commitment by the Partner States and the Community to the advancement of the culture and creative economy of the region.

Hon. Eriyo said the symposium was aimed at promoting the arts and culture as a resource as well as the provision of opportunities and platform for exchange of information, ideas and interaction between cultural practitioners, public policy makers and the private sector in the region.

Hon. Eriyo said the creative and cultural industries ranging from art, film, design, fashion, music, performing arts to software and video games account for approximately 3% of the EAC Gross Domestic Product in addition to providing employment to citizens.

Hon. Eriyo disclosed that the EAC Secretariat in collaboration with the Partner States had concluded the regional mapping of culture and creative industries, adding that the report would shed more light on the sector’s actual potential.

Mr Bob Madanji, the Managing Director and Founder of Cinematic Solutions in Kenya called for the creation of Creative and Cultural Hubs where artists could thrive in order to unleash the economic potential of the sector within the EAC and beyond.

Mr Madanji emphasised the need for Partner State governments to appreciate the contribution of the culture and creative industries in the region, adding that this would increase the sector’s worth and the benefits that would accrue from such appreciation.

While making a presentation on Policy and Legal Frameworks for promotion of Film Industries in EAC, Dr Vicensia Shule from the University of Dar es Salaam (UoD), Tanzania, said piracy and counterfeit products were a big challenge to artists and the industry in all the Partner States.

“Sharing best practices and information is a big challenge among the Partner States, which needs to be addressed”, noted the UoD Don, adding that the East African Film Network was set up in 2014 with support from the EAC Secretariat and GIZ. She observed that the network had not effectively taken off and was largely unknown.

Ms Clarette Inamahoro, Burundi’s Assistant Minister for EAC Affairs in the Office of the President, while making a presentation on affordable financing for EAC culture and creative sector business said to ensure affordable business financing for the sector, many factors must be taken into account for example the creation of a regional strategy framework for strengthening peace and social cohesion by promoting promising initiatives in the sense of affordable costs.

“There is also the need to establish a professional framework for private cultural actors (civil society) that can contribute to a reflection for the establishment of cultural and creative industries promotional platforms, as well as the development of micro-enterprises to job creation in the sector and create a related regional fund”, said Ms Inamahoro.

The festival website is jamafest2015.eac.int.


East African Community
EAC Close
Afrika Mashariki Road
P.O. Box 1096
Arusha
United Republic of Tanzania

Tel: +255 (0)27 216 2100
Fax: +255 (0)27 216 2190
Email: eac@eachq.org