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Pakistan beams Kenya’s tea market after
rice tariff hike
Pakistan
Times
Staff Report
NAIROBI (Kenya): Pakistan
has beamed to effectively shut off Kenya from its largest tea export market
after Nairobi hiked its import duty on rice from the South Asian country by
more than 100 per cent, officials said on Thursday.
"Pakistan has issued a veiled threat that it may reciprocate by increasing
tax on Kenyan tea," said Daniel Koech, a spokesman for Kenya’s trade
ministry. Tariffs for rice entering Kenya increased from 35 to 75 per cent
on January 1, when the East African Community Customs Union entered into
force, prompting Pakistan to threaten a similar boost for Kenya’s tea, which
could cripple its exports.
Pakistan is the leading buyer of Kenyan tea, followed by Egypt, Britain,
Afghanistan and Sudan, according to the Tea Board of Kenya. The spat over
the duty hike has led to a build-up of rice containers at the Kenyan port
city of Mombasa, with importers arguing the new tariffs are unrealistic.
Around 8,000 containers of rice, including some destined for Uganda, have
been stuck in Mombasa since the beginning of the year, officials said.
Officials from the Kenyan ministries of trade, finance and agriculture have
been holding consultations with representatives from the Pakistani High
Commission in Nairobi with a view to breaking the stalemate.
But unless Kenyan authorities reverse the move, Pakistan has threatened to
hit back by increasing the duty on Kenyan tea from the current 33 to 75 per
cent, officials said.
Last month, Pakistani authorities proposed that rice already at the port and
shipments on the high seas be exempted from the new tax regime, but Kenya
remained undecided because the move might upset Tanzania and Uganda, the
other members of the customs union.●
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