Addressing Tanzania’s Parliament in Dodoma during a state
visit hosted by President Suluhu Hassan, Ruto said for Kenya and Tanzania to
move towards deeper integration, they need to act as partners rather than
competitors.
“The conversation we are having today is significant and
consequential, not only for our two countries but also for our region and
continent. At its core, it is about one central task: growing mutual trust to
build shared strength,” President Ruto said.
Ruto regretted that for far too long, relations among
neighbouring countries have been shaped by competition, suspicion and rivalry.
He said these forces have fragmented markets, weakened
voices and constrained collective progress.
“And if we are honest with ourselves, some of these forces
are still very much alive. They call for a generational shift from incremental
progress towards decisive integration.
“Because our biggest barrier is not infrastructure or
policy; it is the quiet mistrust that pervades our relations. That suspicion
has cost us time, opportunity and prosperity and we can no longer afford it,”
he said.
Against this background, he said that for progress and
shared prosperity, the two states must move beyond narrow national calculations
and embrace a mindset of partnership.
He added that for each country’s progress to reinforce the
other’s success, the partnership must be grounded in physical connectivity,
shared infrastructure and deliberate investments that bring the economies
closer together in practical and measurable ways.
“That is why the projects we are advancing together are so
consequential.”
His remarks come amid renewed debate over regional
infrastructure and energy projects, including the planned oil refinery in
Tanga.
The project has been a talking point after President Suluhu
on Monday appeared to rebuke Ruto for announcing it without her knowledge.
In his immediate response, Ruto said he had been made aware
that his announcement had annoyed some members of the Tanzanian leadership.
“Had I known, I would have announced the refinery to be
built in Mombasa. The building of a refinery is a big opportunity for business,
industrialisation, petrochemical industries, fertiliser industries and
plastics,” he said.
“When I had a conversation with President Museveni, the idea
was how to industrialise our region,” Ruto said.
He told the Tanzania Parliament that for Kenya and Tanzania
to move towards deeper integration, they need to act as partners and share
resources for economic progress.
He said his suggestion of the Tanga refinery was intended to
help Tanzania attract investors.
“While I would naturally have preferred such a facility in
Mombasa, I fully recognise that Tanga, less than 200 kilometres away, is part
of the same economic space. What matters is not whether the asset is on one
side of the border or the other. What matters is whether it strengthens our
shared prosperity,” he said.
Ruto repeatedly noted that mistrust remains the biggest
barrier to integration within the East African Community.
He cautioned that unless addressed, these dynamics could
undermine current integration efforts.
He recalled the collapse of the original East African
Community in 1977, arguing that it stemmed not from ideological differences but
from an inability to build a shared economic vision and a retreat into narrow
national interests.
“That was not their failure alone; it becomes our failure if
we repeat it,” he told lawmakers.
Ruto’s address placed strong emphasis on practical steps to
deepen integration, particularly through cross-border infrastructure.
He highlighted ongoing and planned projects, including road
corridors linking coastal towns from Malindi through Lunga Lunga to Dar es
Salaam, expanded railway connections into the Great Lakes region and electricity
interconnectors designed to stabilise and integrate regional power systems.
“These are not just projects for one country. They are part
of a broader vision of shared strength that connects our economies and aligns
our interests.”
The President also pointed to growing economic ties between
Kenya and Tanzania as evidence of untapped potential.
Bilateral trade reached approximately $860 million in 2025
and is projected to hit $1 billion this year, while Kenyan investments in
Tanzania have surpassed $1.7 billion.
Still, he noted that intra-regional trade across East Africa
remains between 15 and 20 per cent of total trade, far below its potential.
Ruto also positioned East African integration as a building
block for broader continental ambitions under the African Continental Free
Trade Area, which aims to create a single market of over 1.5 billion people.
He argued that a more unified East African Community would
be better placed to compete globally and negotiate within international systems
that often marginalise the continent.