Press Release

EACJ President calls upon the stakeholders to strengthen their cooperation & relationship with the Court

East African Court of Justice Arusha, 19th June 2018: The President of the East African Court of Justice, Hon Justice Dr Emmanuel Ugirashebuja, while at the opening of a three days sensitization workshop for the Judges, State Attorneys and Members of the Bar Association of the Republic of Uganda on the role of the Court in the advancement of the East African Community Integration agenda, called upon the participants to strengthen their cooperation and relationship with the Court.

His Lordship told the participants that, the future and effectiveness of the Court will largely depend on its relationship with other stakeholders. “Your role as Judges, State Attorneys and Advocates is very crucial in the development of the EAC laws, jurisprudence and uniform interpretation and application of the EAC law.” Said the President of the Court. He further added that, it is only jointly that the partners in the rule of law chain can develop the potential of East African integration and reap the benefits it offers.

Justice Ugirashebuja in his remarks further said that, East African integration is of utmost importance to all the Partner States in the region, economically, politically and socially and that through integration and the development of an internal market, economic growth is inevitably stimulated. However, he added that the path to a high level of political, socio-economic, cultural and financial integration is sometimes fraught with uncertainties, and is at times long and bumpy. Most of these challenges are legal.

The President also said that, as regional integration experience has shown, law plays an absolutely vital role in integration. It is law that provides the legal backbone of Regional integration. It is law that provides the concrete rights and benefits of regional integration to businesses and individuals. It is law that allows for the free and efficient movement within the internal market. And it is also within the legal framework that the political actors meet and interact. Justice Ugirashebuja stressed that because of the importance of law, regional integration requires good cooperation between all the partners in the rule of law chain: judges, lawyers, civil servants, academics, businesses and individuals. “We all must contribute to make the EAC a living legal reality.” He stated

His Lordship emphasized on the role of the court, which is crucial in resolving disputes which would otherwise threaten the survival of a Community. That the existence of dispute is real and to an extent an important ingredient of any development as a Community. He also said that the absence of dispute should not be the focus of the evolution of the EAC, but the focus should be on how we resolve the disputes. Justice Ugirashebuja further added that without an effective dispute resolution mechanism, the survival of the Community is at stake and that without its case law, and many principles that the Court has developed and will continue to develop, the Community will certainly not be where it is today and will not arrive at where it aims to be.

The Executive Director of the Judicial Training Institute (JTI) Hon Justice Henry Peter Adonyo, who was also in attendance, commended the EACJ President, “We at the Judicial Training Institute thank the EACJ for choosing to bring to the Institute this important exercise which could have very well been held elsewhere. We appreciate and thank you for your confidence in the Institute and we hope that we are not a disappointment to you.”

Justice Adonyo also noted that the sensitization workshop will equip you the participants with relevant knowledge about the EACJ and the EAC at large so that at the end of the day you have adequate knowledge and become familiar with the institutional arrangements of the East African Community and more especially the East African Court of Justice and thus reflect on how each and every one of us can contribute to its effectiveness.

The workshop was also attended by the Hon Lady Justice Jane Kiggundu representing the Principal Judge of the High Court of Uganda, the representative of the Attorney General of the Republic of Uganda, Mr J.B.R Suuza, President of the Uganda Law Society, Mr Simon Peter M. Kibone among others.

During the workshop, there were a number of paper presentations made on the role of the judiciaries in East Africa in the integration process and the relationship of EACJ with National Courts, a paper which was presented by the President of the Court (EACJ), Hon Justice Dr Emmanuel Ugirashebuja, a paper on the legal and Judicial framework of EAC and EACJ that was presented by the Hon Justice Dr Charles Oyo Nyawello, the Jurisprudence of the Appellate Division done by Justice Geoffrey Mupere Kiryabwire of the EACJ Appellate Division as well as Justice of the Court of Appeal of Uganda. Justice Kiryabwire also delivered a paper on the role of ICT in efficiency administration of Justice at the EACJ. Lastly there was a paper on the jurisprudence of the EACJ First Instance Division and judicial responsibilities by the Deputy Registrar Her Worship Ms Geraldine Umugwaneza and the Research Officer of the Court Ms Wanjiru Kathleen Rubia.

The Court has held the same sensitizations in some of the Partner States like the Republic of South Sudan, Burundi, now Uganda and next week will proceed to Rwanda and then later in Dar Es Salaam and Nairobi Kenya.

ENDS

For more information, please contact:

Yufnalis Okubo
Registrar
East African Court of Justice
Arusha, Tanzania
Tel: +255 27 2162149
mail: Okubo [at] eachq.org
www.eacj.org

About the East African Court of Justice:

The East African Court of Justice (EACJ or ‘the Court’), is one of the organs of the East African Community established under Article 9 of the Treaty for the Establishment of the East African Community. Established in November 2001, the Court’s major responsibility is to ensure the adherence to law in the interpretation and application of and compliance with the EAC Treaty.

Arusha is the temporary seat of the Court until the Summit determines its permanent seat. The Court’s sub-registries are located in the respective National Courts in the Partner States.

 

EAC Executive decries high number of East Africans seeking health services in India

East African Community Secretariat, Arusha, Tanzania, 16th June, 2018: The Executive Secretary of the East African Health Research Commission (EAHRC), Professor Gibson Kibiki, has decried the high number of East Africans going to India to seek medical services which can be accessed in hospitals in the region.

Prof. Kibiki attributed the huge exodus of patients to India to the lack of information on health services that were available at referral hospitals in the region.

Prof. Kibiki noted that some of the most sought after services by East Africans in the Asian country included diseases of the heart, the kidney and cancer that could be handled locally by EAC designated Regional Centres of Excellence (RCoEs).

The ES cited some of the RCoEs as those for Kidney Diseases (Kenya); Heart Diseases (Tanzania); Cancer (Uganda), and; eHealth, Biomedical Engineering and Health Rehabilitation Sciences (Rwanda).

Consequently, Prof. Kibiki would said that the Commission would soon avail on its updated website information on the RCoEs and the health services that they offer.

Prof. Kibiki was speaking at the EAHRC Headquarters in Bujumbura, Burundi when he received a delegation led by EAC Secretary General, Amb. Liberat Mfumukeko.

On HIV/AIDS, Prof. Kibiki disclosed that the Commission would focus its research on life-prolonging drugs and how to make them work better.

He cautioned members of the public and especially the youth that despite the huge advances made in combating HIV/AIDS, the disease is still with us and preventive measures were necessary.

The ES attributed the increasingly high level of resistance antibiotics to the practice of purchasing drugs over the counter and under dosages sometimes through self-prescription by members of the public.

He revealed that East Africans may soon be able to access treatment across national borders in addition to enjoying portable health insurance across the region, adding that the Commission would soon undertake research to gauge the feasibility of a regional health insurance scheme before piloting the scheme.

He described as counterproductive the tendency by health researchers and medics in the Partner States to work in silos since the region was one and that diseases did not know national borders.

In his remarks, EAC Secretary General Amb. Mfumukeko noted that the Commission brings together the best brains in health research from the entire region to tackle challenges faced by East Africans in accessing quality healthcare.

Amb. Mfumukeko said that the EAC Council of Ministers had put in place the Commission out of the realisation that the region could not forever be dependent on medical research conducted in developed countries.

The Secretary General further said that the Commission would give young researchers opportunities to hone their skills in the ever-changing medical field.

He hailed the Commission for mobilizing more than US$4 million for its operations from development partners over the last one year.

The SG has been on a tour of EAC Institutions and projects in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

NOTES TO EDITORS:

The East African Health Research Commission (EAHRC) was established in 2008 and operationalized in the year 2015. EAHRC was established as a mechanism for making available to the Community advice on all matters of health and health-related research and finding that are necessary for knowledge generation, technological development, policy formulation and practice. The Commission is the principal advisory institution to the EAC on Health Research and Development (R&D).

The broad objective of the Commission is to promote, facilitate and coordinate the conduct and application of health research for the improvement of health and for the wellbeing of the people of East Africa. The Commission has its headquarters in Bujumbura, Burundi.

-ENDS-

For more information, please contact:

Mr Owora Richard Othieno
Head, Corporate Communications and Public Affairs Department
EAC Secretariat
Arusha, Tanzania
Tel: +255 784 835021
Email: OOthieno [at] eachq.org

About the East African Community Secretariat:

The East African Community (EAC) is a regional intergovernmental organisation of five Partner States, comprising Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, with its headquarters in Arusha, Tanzania. 

Burundian Minister for EAC Affairs emphasises the need to make EAC integration process inclusive

East African Community Secretariat, Arusha, Tanzania, 15th June, 2018:The Minister to the Office of the President responsible for East African Community Affairs in Burundi, Hon. Isabelle Ndahayo, has emphasized the need to involve all stakeholders including the ordinary people in the EAC integration process.

Hon. Ndahayo said that it was by making the integration process inclusive that stakeholders and citizens who are also the taxpayers would own the process and support it.

The Minister noted that the Treaty for the Establishment of the EAC was clear that the integration process should be people-driven with the private sector as the engine of economic growth.

Hon. Ndahayo said that inclusivity involved engaging stakeholders as much as possible in the formulation and implementation of policies on integration.

The Minister restated the commitment of the Government of Burundi to involve the private sector, civil society organisations and other interest groups in the integration process by establishing a National Dialogue Committee in accordance with the directive of the EAC Council of Ministers.

The Minister particularly singled out the role of the media whom she said were at the frontline in educating EAC citizens on the integration.

Hon. Ndahayo said that with the East African integration progressing at a steady pace, the role of the media would become critical in promoting socio-economic transformation in the region in addition to eliciting the full participation of the citizenry in the process.

The Minister made the remarks in a speech read on her behalf by her assistant, Ms. Clarette Inamahoro, at the opening session of the inaugural EAC Secretary General’s Media Forum held in Bujumbura. The forum drew participation from journalists in Burundi and other EAC Partner States as well representatives of civil society, the private sector and government of Burundi.

Hon. Ndahayo said that journalists should be able to act as catalysts in bridging the information and awareness gap between the EAC and the citizens while leveraging in addition to educating them on the status and achievements of the integration.

Addressing the forum, EAC Secretary General Amb. Liberat Mfumukeko said that one of the critical challenges facing the Community was lack of awareness on the integration process.

Amb. Mfumukeko said that the EAC had made significant achievements including increased trade volumes, infrastructure development, water supply and sanitation, and harmonization of education systems and curricula yet most East Africans could not link these achievements to the Community.

In his remarks, the Registrar of the East African Court of Justice, His Worship Yufnalis Okubo, said the Court had played a crucial role in dispensing justice to aggrieved East Africans with regard to matters touching on the violation of the provisions of the EAC Treaty.

Mr. Okubo noted that most of the cases that had been handled by the Court revolved around the violation of Article 6(d) of the Treaty which demands of Partner States to adhere to the universally acceptable principles of good governance, the rule of law, observance of human rights and social justice.

The Registar cited the case of the Republic of South Sudan whose election of MPs to the East African Legislative Assembly was nullified by the Court after a citizen successfully sued the government for breach of the election rules as specified by the Treaty. The South Sudan National Legislative Assembly subsequently conducted an election of the country’s nine EALA MPs in accordance with the provisions of the Treaty.

On his part, the Deputy Executive Secretary of the East African Science and Technology Commission, Dr. Saidi Kibeya, said that the region would not achieve the goals it had set for itself in increasing trade and socio-economic growth if it didn’t promote Science, Technology and Innovations.

Dr. Kibeya said that it was incumbent upon governments, academic and research institutions to work with the private sector to transform innovations into products and services that could be competitive on the international market.

-ENDS-

For more information, please contact:

Mr Owora Richard Othieno
Head, Corporate Communications and Public Affairs Department
EAC Secretariat
Arusha, Tanzania
Tel: +255 784 835021
Email: OOthieno [at] eachq.org

About the East African Community Secretariat:

The East African Community (EAC) is a regional intergovernmental organisation of five Partner States, comprising Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, with its headquarters in Arusha, Tanzania. 

The EAC Secretariat is ISO 9001:2008 Certified

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East African Community
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P.O. Box 1096
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United Republic of Tanzania

Tel: +255 (0)27 216 2100
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Email: eac@eachq.org