The five newly sworn in
Commissioners of the EAC Competition Authority (L-R), Innocent
Habarugira (Burundi), Mr. Sam Watasa (Uganda), Dr. Frederick Ringo
(Tanzania), Dr. Didas Kayihura (Rwanda) and Francis Kariuki (Kenya),
at the Commission’s inaugural meeting held at the EAC Headquarters.
Ugandan Commissioner Sam Watasa,
Tanzanian Commissioner Dr. Frederick Ringo, EACJ Registrar Yufnalis
Okubo and the Counsel to the Community, Dr. Anthony Kafumbe, at the
swearing in ceremony of the Commissioners of the EAC Competition
Authority.
The Vice Chancellor of the Kigali
Independent University (ULK), Dr. Ezechiel Sekibibi, congratulates a
female student from the United Republic of Tanzania.
The Vice Chancellor of the Kigali
Independent University Dr, Ezechiel Sekibibi hands over a certifi
cate to Muhumuza Umar from the Mbarara University of Science and
Technology (the new EAC Youth Ambassador for Uganda).
East African Community Secretariat,
Arusha, 2 November, 2016. The five (5) newly appointed Commissioners
of the East African Community Competition Authority (EACCA) have been
sworn in at the EAC Headquarters in Arusha, Tanzania.
The appointed Commissioners were
approved by the 33rd Meeting of the Council of Ministers held on 29th
February 2016, which considered nominees submitted by each Partner
State and appointed them as Commissioners of the EACCA. Furthermore,
the 34th Meeting of the Council of Ministers held on 5th September,
2016, approved the Commissioners’ terms and conditions of service
as provided by Section 38(6) of the EAC Competition Act, 2006.
The five Commissioners of the
Authority include Mr. Innocent Habarugira (Burundi), Mr. Francis W.
Kariuki (Kenya), Dr. Frederick Ringo (Tanzania), Dr. Didas M.
Kayihura (Rwanda) and Mr. Sam K. Watasa (Uganda).
Presiding over the function on
behalf of the EAC Secretary General, the Registrar of the East
African Court of Justice His Worship Yufnalis Okubo, welcomed and
congratulated the commissioners upon their appointment as the first
Commissioners to serve the EAC Competition Authority.
“The onset of the EAC Common
Market, coupled with our engagement in the globalized world implies
that a higher percentage of competition cases have a significant
regional and international ramification. The foregoing calls for the
establishment of the EAC Competition Authority to regulate regional
competition matters,” said the Registrar.
He urged Partner States to benchmark
on international best practices in the enforcement of the EAC
Competition Act 2006.
The EAC Competition Act, 2006, among
other things, seeks to allow consumers to take class action against
goods or services providers. It also seeks to seal loopholes that
enable trade associations and firms operating across the region to
engage in exclusive agreements, or form cartels, forcing consumers to
pay higher prices for goods and services.
The Authority is an independent
organ of EAC but subject to judicial review by the EACJ (as provided
for in Sections 44 and 46 of the EAC Competition Act, 2006. It is
mandated to develop appropriate procedures for public sensitization,
consultation and participation.
Competition advocacy will entail
providing information to citizens and businesses on competition
whereas consultation will involve asking stakeholders for comments
and advice regarding the Authority’s enforcement practice and on
matters it intends to regulate.
In relation to participation, the
Authority is expected to provide Partner States’ governments with
comments and advice relating to the compatibility of Partner States’
regulatory activities with requirements of the Act. The Authority is
also obligated to publish an annual report as well as occasional
reports.
The enforcement of the EAC
Competition Act, 2006 will trigger obligations for enterprises
operating in various sectors as well as for Partner States. In
particular, it is necessary for the Authority to evaluate what
mechanisms will be used to implement the EAC Competition Act in a
context where only two Partner States have operational national
competition authorities, two Partner States are at advanced stages of
establishing national competition authorities and one Partner State
is in the process of enacting a competition law.
Given the confidential and sensitive
nature of the matters to be handled by the Ad Hoc Competition
Authority, the Commissioners took an Oath of Secrecy and an Oath of
Allegiance before they embarked on discharging their services to the
Community.
The Commissioners pledged their
commitment to the Community by signing the Oaths of Allegiance and
Secrecy, a formality and requirement delivered and witnessed by the
EACJ Registrar; His Lordship Yufnalis Okubo, assisted by the Counsel
to the Comminity; Dr. Anthony Kafumbe, Principal Human Resource
Officer, Ms. Ruth Simba, among other staff from the EAC Secretariat.
During their three-day inaugural
meeting, the Commissioners considered the Authority’s draft
internal rules of procedure which spell out how it will conduct its
business, developed a work plan and EAC merger review issues.
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