Over 50 business operators
from Rwanda’s different sectors arrived in the Mozambican capital Maputo on
Monday for the Rwanda-Mozambique business forum. “We are looking for potential
partnerships in different investment areas and our traders are ready to expand
and explore more opportunities here,” said Robert Bafakulera the Chairman
Private Sector Federation-Rwanda . Excitement
as our members showcase #MadeInRwanda products
in #Mozambique.
They’re part of Rwanda-Mozambique business Forum that kicked off today. This is
a great platform to expand their market base and get partnerships with their
counterparts.
Last year, Gil Bires, Director General of Mozambique’s investment and export
promotion agency APIEX invited Rwandan business operators to explore the vast
investment opportunities in his country. “We are open. There is a window for
opportunity that the Rwandan private sector can take advantage of. And they are
most welcome. We have a very attractive regulation on investment which is
friendly for foreign direct investments,” Gil Bires said. Mozambique has
untapped opportunities in domains such as agriculture especially in production
of cereals, fruits, flowers, and vegetables, for both the local and export
markets.
Other lucrative investment
areas include energy, infrastructure, manufacturing, mineral resources, and
fisheries and aquaculture. According to Bires Mozambique has a lucrative oil
and gas sector but agriculture, manufacturing, tourism, infrastructure and
energy are, presently, Maputo’s priority investment sectors even if “we are
open to other investments.”
Mozambican investment law
grants certain tax and customs benefits depending on the amount, location and
sector of investment activity. Mozambique has an area of 799, 390 square
kilometres and a population of about 24 million people. In Mozambique, land
belongs to the state which means that it is easy for those that want to invest
in agriculture to have access to land. Rwanda and Mozambique diplomatic ties
have for the past two years flourished and the leaders of these two countries
have signed a list of treaties. I Maputo muri Mozambique hateraniye inama ihuje
abashoramari 54 bo mu Rwanda na bagenzi babo bo muri icyo gihugu, aho barebera
hamwe amahirwe y’ishoramari aboneka mu bihugu byombi. Last year, Rwanda
airlifted a 1,000-person contingent of the Rwanda Defence Force (RDF) and the
Rwanda National Police (RNP) to troubled Cabo Delgado Province. The Rwandan contingent was
deployed to support efforts to restore Mozambican state authority by conducting
combat and security operations, as well as stabilisation and security-sector
reform (SSR). Rwanda’s contingent of 1,000 soldiers is the biggest foreign force
in resource-rich Cabo Delgado, which is the site of a $20 billion (€17 billion)
liquefied natural gas project operated by French energy giant Total. But the
area has also seen numerous attacks carried out by Islamist jihadis. The
violence has uprooted more than 800,000 people.
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