Somalilandsun: Rwanda has signed with Tunisia an air service agreement to bring the number to 101 deals of the kind between Rwanda and countries that committed to make the free movement of people a reality.
The agreement, according to Rwanda’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was signed between Dr Vincent Biruta – Rwanda’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and International cooperation and Sabri Bachtobji, the Tunisian State Minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The event that took place in Addis Ababa-Ethiopia, in the sideline of the ongoing 33rd African Union Ordinary Summit, comes a week after a similar deal with Somalia.
On the 8th February this year Rwanda and Somalia signed a Bilateral Air Service Agreements (BASA) marking the 100th deal to be penned for the former.
The deal, which allows both countries to share a free airspace authorization will facilitate trade, tourism and investment cooperation.
The deal was penned in Kigali this weekend between Rwanda’s Infrastructure Minister Ambassador Claver Gatete and his Somali counterpart, Mohammed Abdullahi Salat, the Somalian Minister of Transport & Aviation.
“Today marks the signing of 100th bilateral air service agreements to facilitate trade, tourism and investment cooperation but also enhance the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA),” Minister Gatete said.
Gatete also noted that this move also comes as a way of facilitating free trade at a time when Rwanda waiver visa fees for 90 countries in the African Union, Commonwealth, French speaking countries- International Organisation of Francophonie (OIF).
Minister Abdullahi Salat said that signing this deal will also be an opportunity for Somalia to learn an economic and social transformation lesson from Rwanda since both countries share a hard past history of genocide and conflict.
“We would like to learn from Rwanda’s aviation sector so that our national carrier- ‘Somalia airlines’’ can also perform well and increase movement of our citizens and trade in the region and continent,” Salat said.
Being on the front lines of initiating and implementing the Continental Free Trade Agreement deal, Rwanda has set an ambitious to spread its aviation wings and improve doing business to attract more investors and exports.
One of the latest BASA deals include one with Namibia, and Brazil. Rwanda banks on such deals to improve its steadfast growing economy which is expected to grow at 8% average performance largely backed by manufacturing, tourism, mining sectors.
With reports by KTpress