Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta commissions newly acquired Diesel Multiple Units for the country’s revamped commuter rail system. (Photo Courtesy: Kenya Railways)
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta on Tuesday officially
commissioned the country’s revamped commuter rail system in efforts to
decongest traffic in the capital, Nairobi.
The system, which will also feature a new light cargo
handling facility, was built to improve the ease of doing business in the
country, particularly for small scale traders.
“We are also talking about the ease of doing business by our
small traders they are our biggest employers and we need to ensure that they
are treated fairly, and they are facilitated just like all others are,”
President Kenyatta said while commissioning the project.
President Kenyatta unveils a commemorative plaque to officially commission the Nairobi Central Railway Station Refurbished under the Modernization Program of the Nairobi Commuter Rail Service. | #NairobiCommuterRail pic.twitter.com/MuYI6v1sLt
— State House Kenya (@StateHouseKenya) November 10, 2020
Kenya’s finance minister Ukur Yatani echoed the president’s
comments saying the facility will allow traders to access their goods in
Nairobi instead of traveling all the way to the port city of Mombasa as had
been the case.
“This initiative coupled with One Stop Border Post (OSBP)
has improved the flow and efficiency of goods and services across our borders,
with considerable savings to traders,” Yatani said.
He added traders will access their imported goods at the
facility without intervention of clearing agents and other intermediaries to
reduce the bureaucracy and lower the cost of handling imported goods.
“…we have been closely engaging the traders with a view to
solving issues around the importation of their goods. Key amongst them, has
been delays in cargo clearance for most traders who import through
consolidators,” Yatani noted.
Kenyatta also directed the Kenya Bureau of Standards (KBS)
to levy a uniform charge on imported goods irrespective of their size to all
businesses.
Small-scale traders, especially those who trade in used
clothes, have previously complained of the high cost of doing business due to
high taxation rates despite the small volume of goods they handle.
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