Ghana and Kenya agree to promote intra-trade after Uhuru, Mahama meet

President Uhuru Kenyatta when he held talks with his Ghana counterpart John Mahama at State House, Nairobi, August 29. /PSCU
President Uhuru Kenyatta when he held talks with his Ghana counterpart John Mahama at State House, Nairobi, August 29. /PSCU

President Uhuru Kenyatta on Monday held talks with Ghanaian leader John Dramani Mahama which centered on cooperation in energy, oil, telecommunications and aviation.

At their State House Nairobi meeting, they discussed ways of enriching the bonds of friendship and cooperation between the two countries to improve on the ease of doing business so as to increase overall intra-African trade.

President Mahama and government ministers, United Nations agencies and more than 10,000 delegates who were in Nairobi for the 6th Tokyo International Conference on African Development (), the first on African soil.

Presidents Kenyatta and Mahama exchanged views on the need to establish Double Taxation Agreements between the two nations, protect investments in each other’s country and how Nairobi and Accra could serve as effective sub-regional aviation hubs in East and West Africa respectively.

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The two leaders sought the implementation of various agreements signed between the two nations two years ago, which include development of partnerships in Air Services and Trade, Tourism, Agriculture, Energy, Oil and Gas, Information and Communications Technologies, (ICTs), and Education.

The Ghanaian leader commended Kenya for its success in the tourism sector. President Mahama had first-hand experience of it when he visited Masai Mara game reserve on Monday.

Ties between the two countries date back to the pre-colonial days when Ghana's First President Kwame Nkrumah and Kenya's founding father President Jomo Kenyatta worked closely to defeat colonialism and were both famous Pan Africanists.

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