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African Regional News Updates |
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19 May 2009 Kampala — President Yoweri Museveni
has invited Iranian businessmen to invest in Uganda
and benefit from the Africa's 900 million people
market.
The President, during his three-day visit to Iran
that ended on Sunday, told the Iranian traders that if
they invested in Uganda they would be able to export
to the US and the European Union quota and tariff free
Uganda is benefiting from the African Growth and
Opportunity ACT (AGOA) law of the US and EBA
(everything but arms) policy of Europe.
Museveni said they would also be able to export
finished products to China on the same terms involving
440 products, according to a statement issued by State
House.
The President was addressing the Iranian Chamber of
Commerce, Industries and Mines over the weekend.
He said that Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania were
working together to modernise the railway system in
the region.
When this is done, he explained, the region would
have a dependable transport infrastructure to do
business cheaply.
"In order for one to do business profitably, one
needs to have raw materials, have the capacity to
process them into finished products, a market for the
products and infrastructure to transport what has been
processed and good policies," the statement quotes the
President as having said. It added Museveni informed
the Iranian business community that Uganda has the raw
materials.
He also told them that if they came to do business
in country they would have access not only to the
Ugandan market, but also to those in East Africa.
"The President told the Iranian entrepreneurs that
the challenge facing Uganda is processing the
diversity of raw materials the country has into
finished products."
He invited Iranian entrepreneurs to come and engage
in the processing of the country's raw materials
either on joint venture arrangement with Ugandan
businesspeople or as individuals.
He also assured them that there are no obstructions
in all sectors. Museveni was pleased by various
testimonies from Iranian investors doing business in
the country, who said "Kampala is now the safest city
in East Africa."
They said the only insecurity they are facing was
road accidents. The first vice-president of the
Iranian Chamber of Commerce, Industries and Mines, Mir
Mohammad Sadeghi, called for promotion of trade
relations between Uganda and Iran.
He said Iranian businesspeople wish to make joint
ventures in Uganda, especially in the cement sector.
Sadeghi said a delegation would soon come to Uganda to
establish the necessary contacts with a view to
expanding the cement industry.
He also noted that Iranians could form joint
ventures with Uganda in fields like electricity,
aviation, shipping and petroleum.
Olive Kigongo, the Uganda National Chamber of
Commerce and Industry president, also addressed the
meeting.
EsinIslam.Com
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