Workers load export products onto a ship destined for Tanzania from Kisumu pier. EABC says Tanzania continues to enforce disguised policies to protect its domestic industries from regional competition.
The East African Business Council has put Tanzania in the dock, accusing it of retaining protectionist business regulations in the region, which hinder intra-regional trade.
The business lobby said Tanzania continues to  enforce disguised policies to protect its domestic industries from  regional competition. 
The lobby accused Tanzania Food and Drugs  Authority (TFDA), Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) and Tanzania Bureau  of Standards (TBS) of bureaucracy in facilitating intra-region-trade. 
For instance, the EABC members said it takes up to  nine months for TFDA to register products from EAC partner states,  which goes against the country’s law that provides a maximum duration of  60 days.
The complaints by the business community highlight  the challenges that continue to face EAC over the elimination of trade  barriers. 
These barriers have denied the region larger  markets, economies of scale, and promotion of local, regional and global  trade — the benefits envisaged with free trade among the nations. 
A report by the EAC Secretariat released earlier  this year showed that despite the target to do away with non-tariff  barriers (NTBs) by December 2012 some countries have even introduced  fresh ones — about 10 — while 35 remained unresolved. Only 36 have been  resolved. 
READ: Fresh hurdles to free trade emerge, NTBs push up costs
This means businesses will have to continue  incurring huge costs arising from the NTBs — mainly weighbridges,  roadblocks, poor infrastructure, unnecessary delays at border posts,   lack of harmonised import and export standards procedures and  documentation.
“It takes over nine months to register a product  in Tanzania, whereas the same process takes less than a month outside  the EAC,” Raphael Kimoni, the exports manager at Kevian (K) Ltd,  told  an EABC and Tanzania Private Sector Foundation (TPSF) meeting in Dar es  Salaam last week. 
Mr Kimoni, whose company manufactures juice, was  also concerned with the TFDA’s reluctance to share the laboratory  analysis of the product it declines to register.
Richard Musani, marketing manager at Ugandan firm  Movit Products, said once a standards body of any EAC partner states  certifies a product, the same merchandise should be registered in the  shortest period possible.
“TFDA needs to spend five to ten days to register a  product from the EAC member countries since the partner states have  harmonised standards,” said Mr Musani.
Director of food safety at TFDA Raymond Wigenge, blamed the delays on inadequate staff at the agency. 
“TFDA has around ten staff members to deal with  thousands of products waiting for registration. So the delay is not  deliberate,” Mr Wigenge told the business community.
The EABC members also said the numerous licences demanded by  the Tanzanian taxman was also hurting business. Tanzania transporters  are compelled to have a cargo and transit licences, while those traders  importing finished goods are not subjected to the same.
Pushing for amendments
EABC has been pushing for an amendment to the East  African Community (EAC) treaty to push partner states to implement the  Customs Union and Common Market Protocols to effectively end or reduce  barriers.  
The EAC partners had, in principle, agreed to  remove NTBs by December, but in the absence of a legally binding  framework, the implementation largely depends on the goodwill of the  countries. The business executives also complained of duplication in the  checks and clearance by the agencies. 
READ: Slow execution of protocol hampering EAC growth - report
For instance, products from EAC partner states  entering the Tanzania’s market are subjected to the laboratory testing,  certification and licensing by both TFDA and TRA. 
Clearing agents
TRA Commissioner for Customs and Excise, Tiagi  Masamaki Kabisi said nearly 80 per cent of delays in clearance of cargo  was caused by clearing agents.
 “We are taking the blame, but the truth of the  matter is that 80 per cent of imports and exports documents are normally  rejected at the first entry point due to  errors” Mr Kabisi said.
He said clearance agents take long to respond to queries raised from documents they have lodged for clearance of cargo.
Volumes of trade
According to the EABC executive director, Andrew  Luzze, the EAC-intra-trade at the moment stands at 13 per cent of the  total trade volume, against the 87 per cent of business that the bloc  offers the outside world.
“We are exporting thousands of jobs to the outside  world while our own people are jobless. The public and private sector  must work together to change the trend,” Mr Luzze said.
European Union, intra-trade accounts for 60 per  cent of the total trade, while trade within the North America Free Trade  Area (NAFTA) accounts for 48 per cent of the total trade of its member  states. 
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