logo
Financial crisis looms in East African Community as member states owe $58 million

Financial crisis looms in East African Community as member states owe $58 million

As of March 2025, the East African Community Secretariat revealed that member states collectively owe a staggering $58 million in contributions, setting off a string of challenges for the bloc.
This followed a meeting of the EAC Council of Ministers in Arusha, Tanzania this week to address the financial crisis caused by a shortage of funds for programs and staff salaries, which is threatening operations at the Secretariat.
The meeting highlighted the cash shortfall as a top agenda item, alongside security concerns.
This significant shortfall in funding has put essential programs and staff salaries at risk, threatening to halt operations across the bloc.
Zawya reports that the growing debt and the lack of consistent budget remittances from partner states have put the future stability of the EAC in jeopardy.
The EAC
The East African Community (EAC) is a regional intergovernmental organization comprising six member states: Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, and South Sudan.
Founded in 1967, the EAC aims to promote economic integration, peace, and stability within East Africa. It seeks to foster cooperation in various sectors, including trade, infrastructure development, and security.
The EAC operates through various institutions and organs, including the Council of Ministers, the East African Court of Justice, and the EAC Secretariat, which is based in Arusha, Tanzania.
The organization has made significant strides toward creating a common market and political federation but faces challenges related to financial constraints and member states' commitment.
East African states see cash crunch
As of March 2025, EAC member states owed $58,048,678 to the bloc, with only Kenya and Tanzania fully paying their contributions.
Uganda has paid 99% of its due amount. The ongoing defaults have forced the EAC Secretariat, led by Veronica Nduva, to scale back operations.
The East African Legislative Assembly (EALA) has skipped sittings, and the East African Court of Justice (EACJ) faces a backlog of over 260 cases, worsened by a lack of permanent judges.
The Secretariat is also dealing with a staffing crisis, with 150 vacancies and 30 senior staff set to leave by the end of the financial year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zohran Mamdani visits Uganda with wife after secret wedding
Zohran Mamdani visits Uganda with wife after secret wedding

New York Post

timea day ago

  • New York Post

Zohran Mamdani visits Uganda with wife after secret wedding

Socialist Zohran Mamdani is back in Uganda, the country of his birth — but just to celebrate his wedding. The Democrat mayoral candidate, 33, announced the visit to the East African country in a video addressed to his 'haters' on X on Sunday morning, and even found time to have a pop at The Post. 'Being a politician means listening, not just to your supporters, but to your critics too,' he said in the video. 'And some of these critics – especially on a certain website – have been giving me consistent advice.' Sharing a series of posts on X telling the Queens congressman to 'go back to Africa,' Mamdani, who moved to the US when he was 7, joked that he was taking his trolls' advice. Advertisement 3 Zohran Mamdani announced he was returning to Uganda on Sunday. X/ZohranKMamdani 'I hear you, and I agree: I'm going back to Uganda,' he said, before adding, 'I'm headed there in a personal capacity to celebrate Rama and I's marriage with our family and friends.' Mamdani and Rama Duwaji, 27, an artist and animator, married in February this year, the would-be successor to Eric Adams revealed in a post on X in May. Advertisement 'But I do want to apologize to the haters, because I will be coming back,' Mamdani added, before having a pop at The Post. 3 The visit is to celebrate his marriage to artist Rama Duwaji. Instagram/Le Marché des Fleurs 'And since you will undoubtedly read about this trip in The New York Post – inshallah on the front page – here are a few of my humble suggestions for headlines,' he said, before dropping a few pale imitations of The Post's signature style. 3 The trip comes after Mamdani won the Democratic primary for the NYC mayoral election last month. AP Advertisement Mamdani's campaign issued a statement about the visit to Uganda. 'Zohran is traveling to Uganda, where he is celebrating his marriage to Rama with their family and close friends,' the statement read. 'He will return to New York before the end of the month and looks forward to resuming public events and continuing his campaign to make the most expensive city in America affordable.'

StanChart Kenya, BII Ink $100M Deal for Small Firms: EastAfrican
StanChart Kenya, BII Ink $100M Deal for Small Firms: EastAfrican

Bloomberg

timea day ago

  • Bloomberg

StanChart Kenya, BII Ink $100M Deal for Small Firms: EastAfrican

Standard Chartered Bank Kenya Ltd. has signed a $100 million deal with British International Investment to support trade finance and working capital needs for micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises, The EastAfrican newspaper reported. The partnership will enable risk sharing between the two companies, allowing them to increase lending to a segment of the market that is typically locked out of the much-needed access to trade finance solutions, the Nairobi-based newspaper said.

Conservative legal group presses agency to act on Trump's voter citizenship mandate despite court injunctions
Conservative legal group presses agency to act on Trump's voter citizenship mandate despite court injunctions

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Conservative legal group presses agency to act on Trump's voter citizenship mandate despite court injunctions

Pro-Trump legal advocacy nonprofit America First Legal (AFL) is calling on the federal Election Assistance Commission (EAC) to begin requiring proof of citizenship for all federal voter registration applicants after the president's effort to do so by executive order was blocked by the courts. AFL filed a petition on Wednesday with the EAC, calling on the agency to amend the national voter registration form to require applicants to provide any one of the following documents proving U.S. citizenship: a U.S. passport, birth certificate, consular report of birth abroad, certificate of naturalization, certificate of citizenship, state-issued REAL-ID compliant license, or other reliable government-issued identification. The move follows a March executive order issued by President Donald Trump, titled "Preserving and Protecting the Integrity of American Elections," which sought to compel the EAC to begin requiring a proof of citizenship requirement on the national voter registration form, in addition to other provisions pertaining to the prohibition of non-citizen voting. A Us Judge Partially Blocked Trump's Election Integrity Order From Taking Force. Is That Legal? Trump's move has been slammed by critics who have argued that it is already illegal for non-U.S. citizens to vote in federal elections. However, a hopeful voter does not need to provide any proof of citizenship and can just self-attest. The portion of Trump's March executive order calling on the EAC to amend the national voter registration form and require all states to comply and use it was ultimately blocked by multiple federal judges following lawsuits that challenged Trump's authority. Read On The Fox News App Second Federal Judge Sides Against Trump's Election Executive Order In AFL's petition to the EAC, the group argues that even though the legal challenges and their resulting temporary injunctions from federal judges are still being adjudicated, the injunctions "are based entirely on separation of powers principles," which leaves the EAC with room "to take commonsense election integrity measures on its own volition." "The executive order used spending powers to have the EAC ensure state election officers were enforcing the law by requiring proof of citizenship," Vice President of America first Legal, Daniel Epstein, further clarified to Fox News Digital. "What we are doing is forcing a change in the forms EAC distributes and we have the ability to enforce in court." Fox News Digital reached out to the EAC for comment but did not receive a article source: Conservative legal group presses agency to act on Trump's voter citizenship mandate despite court injunctions

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store