uGrowth
Africa

Kenya reverses policy on communication with embassies

Foreign diplomats in Kenya will no longer communicate directly with specific government departments, upending a policy employed earlier this year to ease bureaucracy.

Prime Cabinet Musalia Mudavadi on Monday told an audience of diplomats in Nairobi that his office remains the focal point of interactions between Kenya and the outside world, and that future communication will have to pass through the Ministry of Foreign and Diaspora Affairs. 

“Going forth, all correspondences with the government shall be transmitted through the Office of the Chief of Protocol, State Department of Foreign Affairs.

“We believe that this review will allow for a more coherent approach to issues of mutual concern, and we seek your kind cooperation on this matter,” he said at the Radisson Blu Hotel in Nairobi.

Read: Kenya foreign policy shift clips minister’s wings

Mudavadi was addressing the diplomats at a luncheon, his first with foreign envoys since he took over the docket of Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs last month.

Advertisement

Previously, under a directive by President William Ruto, diplomats representing foreign missions were allowed to directly contact departments of interest in what state house argued was to ease bureaucracy and delays.

But Mudavadi said this has since been reviewed to enhance coherence in government communication.

In fact, Kenya’s change of policy earlier this year had been a slight departure from the global tradition where a focal government department often coordinates correspondence with foreign entities, as per the Vienna Conventions of 1961 and 1963, the basic international treaties on diplomatic and consular privileges and conduct.

Nonetheless, Mudavadi said the government was engaging everyone from across the world to help support government programmes such as the Bottom-up policy.

Those engagements will target everyone in Africa, Asia and Australasia, Europe, the Americas and Latin America, and the Middle East, he argued. 

Read: Which way for Kenya’s foreign policy?

“We believe in the power of partnerships,” he said promising to continue discussions with other countries on easing visa restrictions.

“We will keep having bilateral discussions with you about our nations’ restrictive visa policies and laws, as well as any other administrative restrictions that could impede safer and more constructive travels.

“Kenya is persuaded that this is the best way to address difficult and challenging global issues.”

Mudavadi also defended Kenya’s acceptance to lead a police mission to Haiti, labelling it as a show of responsibility on global stage.

He said Kenya is prepared to deploy its police troops because it is traditional consistency.

“To be African is to have global responsibility…which is why we have consistently risen to the occasion whenever peace and security in our region and beyond is threatened,” he said in Nairobi.

According to Mudavadi, Kenya has always intervened in conflict situations because peace and security are crucial for any economic progress.

But Kenya’s deployment plans, now awaiting a parliamentary approval, have faced controversy.

Read: Kenya faces scrutiny over Haiti mission

A Kenyan lawyer, Ekuru Aukot challenged the deployment, earning a stay of any deployment on the basis that the move by Nairobi violates the constitution. He has also argued the mission does not serve Kenya’s direct interests but those of the main financier, the US.

The Kenyan Cabinet, however, went further to endorse the deployment of the Mission to be known as the Multinational Security Support mission (MSS) to Haiti which will include up to 1,000 Kenyan police personnel.

Mudavadi, however, told the diplomats the Mission will require financial and logistical support from other countries to succeed. At least 10 other countries have pledged to send personnel but the US is financing the Mission to the tune of $200 million with Canada supporting training of the troops.

Source:  The East African

Share this content:

Related posts

5 guards arrested over attempting to shoot at minister Nyamutoro

UGrowth
2 years ago

Hard-Learned Lessons from Grace Munyirwa on Private Equity and Venture Capital That Every Founder Must Know Over the last decade, Uganda has seen a number of private equity entries and exits in Uganda. While some exits have been smooth, others have had mixed feelings with some founders having mixed feelings about the whole process, and not least the final outcomes. The latest deal to stir up some emotions has been the merger of Rocket Health, Guardian Health and Kenya’s MyDawa. The transaction involves some key PE firms in the region: Creadev, Alta Semper and Ion Capital, among others. While the deal presents a larger world of opportunities for all the players involved, including the Rocket Health founders, a section of the founders have had some misgivings about the whole deal. In light of the Rocket Health transaction, the CEO East Africa Magazine had an extensive and candid conversation with Mr. Grace Munyirwa, the Founder of Vine Pharmaceuticals, where he shared his own experience of dealing with Private Equity funds and the hard-learnt lessons therefrom— a must-read for anyone contemplating on entering a PE deal or exiting one.

UGrowth
12 months ago

Beyond new tax measures, govt has also proposed some exemptions

UGrowth
2 years ago
Exit mobile version