Afreximbank
President Prof. Benedict Oramah (4th right)
displays the ratification document received from Claude
Rameaux Bireau, Minister of State and Economic Adviser to the
President of the Central African Republic. With them are (L-R) Jean
Jules Jos, Former Minister of State in charge of Programme at the
Presidency of Central African Republic; Dr. George Elombi, Executive
Vice President, Governance Legal and Corporate Services, Afreximbank;
Clement Bilege, Ambassador of Central African Republic to Egypt; and
Amr Kamel, Executive Vice President, Business Development and
Corporate Banking, Afreximbank.
Central
African Republic today in Cairo formalised its membership of the
African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) with the deposit of the
instrument of the country’s ratification of the Bank’s
Establishment Agreement with the continental trade finance
institution.
Speaking
during a ceremony at the Bank’s headquarters, Claude Rameaux
Bireau, Minister of State and Economic Adviser to the President, who
led a five-member delegation, said that Central African Republic had
very high expectations from Afreximbank and looked forward to
strengthened cooperation with the institution.
Mr.
Bireau said that Central African Republic would move quickly to take
up shareholding in the Bank and announced that the government was
already working with the African Development Bank to support it in
that regard.
He
added that the country would participate in the Intra-African Trade
Fair, which was being organized by Afreximbank in collaboration with
the African Union. The trade fair will take place in Cairo from 11 to
17 December.
Earlier,
Prof. Benedict Oramah, President of Afreximbank stated, said that the
Bank was created to support African countries in both good times and
bad times and that the ratification of the Agreement by Central
African Republic would make it possible for it to effectively do
business in the country.
“The
ratification grants us the special privileges and immunities that
make it possible for us to take the risks that other commercial banks
cannot,” Prof. Oramah explained.
He
announced that the Afreximbank had been reviewing six projects, which
the country had identified as priorities in order to see how to
support them, saying that Central African Republic, with its rich
resources, could be an investors paradise if well-marketed.
Central
African Republic had initiated the process of joining the Bank
on 28 November 2017 when it presented an instrument of accession to
the Bank Agreement to Prof. Oramah when he met with President
Faustin-Archange Touadéra in Bangui.
Under
the terms of the Agreement for the Establishment of the Bank, which
was signed by Participating States in Abidjan on 8 May 1993,
countries that did not sign on before it entered into force are
required to first issue an instrument of acceptance and accession and
then proceed to formally ratify the Agreement in order to fully
activate their membership of the Bank.
Membership
of the Bank gives the Central African Republic automatic access to
the full range of products and facilities offered by Afreximbank,
including trade finance facilities, project finance services, trade
information and advisory services, support in the development of a
local content policy and assistance in developing and implementing
industrial parks and special economic zones.
There
are 50 countries currently on the list of Afreximbank participating
and shareholding states, including Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina
Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Chad, Central African Republic,
Comoros, Côte d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti,
Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana,
Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Kenya, and Lesotho.
Others
are Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius,
Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of Congo,
Rwanda, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Sao Tome and Principe,
South Africa, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda,
Zambia and Zimbabwe.
Afreximbank
shareholders are a mix of public and private entities divided into
four classes and consist of African governments, central banks,
regional and sub-regional institutions, private investors and
financial institutions, as well as non-African financial
institutions, export credit agencies and private investors.
Also
on the delegation were Clement Bilege,
Ambassador of Central African Republic to Egypt; Jean Jules Jos,
Former Minister of State in charge of Programme at the Presidency;
and Batolo Mathiu and Amadou Issa of the Embassy of Central African
Republic in Cairo.
Participating
in the ceremony from Afreximbank were Dr. George Elombi, Executive
Vice President, Governance Legal and Corporate Services; Amr Kamel,
Executive Vice President, Business Development and Corporate Banking;
Rene Awambeng, Global Head, Client Relations; Obi Emekekwue; Global
Head, Communications and Events Management; Gerald Chihota, Head
of Board Secretariat; and Jacqueline Clarisse Motsebo of the Board
Secretariat.
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