Regional News

Tanzania’s ban on foreigners operating small businesses sparks Kenyan backlash

Tanzania’s Trade Minister Selemani Jafo said the move was intended to safeguard local livelihoods

July 30 — Tanzania has barred foreign nationals from owning and operating mainly small-scale businesses, sparking concern and a backlash from neighbouring Kenya.

The new directive prohibits them from 15 sectors including mobile money transfers, tour guiding, small-scale mining, on-farm crop buying, beauty salons, curio shops and establishing radio and TV operations.

Trade Minister Selemani Jafo explained that foreigners had increasingly become involved in the informal sector and areas better filled by Tanzanians.

Locally the move has generally been welcomed amid growing concerns that foreigners, including Chinese nationals, have been encroaching on smaller trades.

Last year, traders at Dar es Salaam’s bustling Kariakoo shopping district went on strike to protest against aggressive taxation and unfair competition from Chinese traders.

“We’ve welcomed this decision because it protects the livelihoods of Tanzanian traders,” Severine Mushi, the head of Kariakoo traders’ association, told the Citizen newspaper.

Violators risk fines, six months in jail and loss of visas and work permits.

Jafo added that he hoped the ban, announced on Monday, would also encourage foreigners to invest in large-scale businesses.

But the move has been met with anger in Kenya, with some arguing that it violates East African Community (EAC) agreements that guarantee free movement of people and trade among its eight member states.

Kenyan Trade Minister Lee Kinyanjui called for the ban to be removed, saying it would “hurt” both Kenya’s and Tanzania’s economies.

“It is therefore critical, in the spirit of EAC, that bilateral engagements be held to resolve these issues,” Kinyanjui wrote in a statement on Wednesday.

National Assembly Trade Committee chairman Bernard Shinali warned the move could trigger reciprocal restrictions, Kenya’s Daily Nation reported.

“There are many Tanzanians working in our mining sites too,” the newspaper quoted him as saying.

“It is clear that Tanzanians have gone too far and we should cut links with them.”

Veteran Kenyan hotelier Mohammed Hersi also questioned Tanzania’s move to restrict occupations for foreigners.

“Sometimes, it is important to focus on the bigger picture… Protectionism will never help a country to thrive,” he said on X.

Many other Kenyans have also raised concern on social media, describing Tanzania’s policy move as a big challenge to regional integration.

“Tanzanians are doing all manner of small businesses in Kenya without any hindrance. It’s clear Tanzania has never been serious in making the EAC work,” one person posted on X.

Tanzania and Kenya have experienced periodic political and economic tensions.

Tanzania’s implementation of protective tariffs and import bans has in the past drawn criticism from its regional partners.

In May, Kenya’s Foreign Affairs Minister Musalia Mudavadi said that about 250,000 Kenyans lived, worked or did business in Tanzania, something he noted as he emphasised the need to preserve cordial relations.

He was addressing diplomatic tensions surrounding Tanzania’s treatment of Kenyans who had gone to Dar es Salaam to observe the treason trial of opposition leader Tundu Lissu.

Several of them were deported while prominent Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi, along with Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire, went missing and were later reported to have been tortured and sexually mistreated.

Tanzania is due to hold general elections in October, with the ruling CCM party expected to retain power.

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