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Baiju Kantaria, Elgon Kenya explains

Why Kenya and UK must cultivate trade relations in the wake of COVID-19

For over a century, Kenya and the United Kingdom have enjoyed strong ties hinged on trust, enhanced cooperation, and mutual benefit across key sectors among them trade, tourism, security, health, and education. In this article, Baiju Kantaria, Director at Elgon Kenya, explains his view on trade relations in the wake of COVID-19. 

The UK views Kenya as a strategic partner due to her wealth of agricultural materials, booming services sector, and for being a gateway to other markets in the East African community. It has therefore over the decades invested in growing Kenya to become the region economic powerhouse. Indeed, UK remains one of the largest foreign investors in Kenya with a portfolio approximated at £2.7 billion. More than 200 British companies have set up shops in Kenya opening the country to increased employment opportunities and economic growth.

Kenya, on the other hand, has found a key export market in the UK for its products among them tea, coffee, flowers, and other horticultural produce. For millions of farmers growing French beans, herbs, and avocados, access to UK markets has not only given them the advantage of growing more markets beyond our borders but also created a farming revolution where more farmers are finding farming lucrative, which has ultimately created more jobs and household incomes.

Indeed at the height of COVID-19 last year, when international trade was grinding to halt, due to international freight suspensions, Kenya and UK burnt the midnight oil in finding innovative ways of overcoming the disruptions. Kenya fresh produce was able to find its way into UK supermarkets thanks to the concerted efforts of the two governments and the private sector a highlight of which was the conversion of Kenya Airways passenger planes into cargo freighters ensuring uninterrupted supply of produce. This decision is attributed as one of the factors that has seen Kenya’s agriculture sector remain buoyant in the middle of a calamity.

In this context, the prevailing diplomatic tiff between Kenya and UK over travel bans occasioned by concerns over new COVID-19 variants shouldn’t be allowed to escalate any further. While in these very trying times nations are acting in their best interests to ensure the safety of their people, the success stories of collaboration that have defined our resilience in the last year when the pandemic devastated the world and decimated livelihoods should inspire us to embrace unity of purpose. It is encouraging to learn that the two trading partners have formed a joint emergency committee to address the spat and resolve the impasse within the shortest time possible.

We are in very unfamiliar territories and there is no telling how the virus will evolve. But the resolve to cooperate will determine how we can outpace the virus’s devastating impacts.

Kenya and UK horticulture trade is still grappling with other unprecedented shocks chief among them climate change that has taken a toll on millions of farmers and disrupted supply chains with devastating effects. We shouldn’t lose focus on the huge task ahead in tackling these challenges that no one country can handle on its own.

In international relations, there has always been, and there will always be disagreements between nations, continents, and neighbors; followed by mediation to resolve the issues at hand and move forward. We are better together.

For more information:
Elgon Kenya
elgonkenya.com

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