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Afghanistan still getting Kenyan tea despite Taliban takeover

Monday August 23 2021
Workers pick tea on a farm.

Workers pick tea on a farm. PHOTO | FILE | NMG

By GERALD ANDAE

The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan is yet to hit the export of tea to that country as most of the commodity is still accessing Kabul through the open Pakistan border.

The East African Tea Traders Association (Eatta) said Afghanistan is still getting the bulk of the beverage from Pakistan, which is the leading buyer of Kenya’s tea.

Eatta managing director Edward Mudibo added that there were no reports of payment problems and that tea trade with Pakistan remains smooth despite the melee in next door Afghanistan.

“There have been no disruptions at all on our exports to Afghanistan because exporters are getting their payments well and Kabul itself can get tea from Pakistan because of the open border,” he said.

Afghanistan purchased tea worth about Ksh2 billion ($18 million) last year to rank among the top 15 buyers of Kenyan tea. The commodity accounts for more than 50 percent of Kenya’s exports to the Asian country.

Kenya’s exports to Afghanistan have been falling steadily from highs of Ksh14 billion ($127 million) in 2012 to Ksh3.6 billion ($32 million) last year, mainly on uncertainty after the US and its Western allies gradually ceded control of the country’s security systems to the governments of Afghanistan’s two post-Taliban presidents, Hamid Karzai, and Ashraf Ghani.

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The retaking of the Afghan capital Kabul by the Taliban a week ago— 20 years since they were toppled from power by US-led forces in 2001—is projected to negatively impact trade with Kenya.

Kenya’s other exports to Afghanistan include coffee, mate, spices, pharmaceuticals, rubber, textile, edible vegetables, and machinery.

The decline in Kenya’s overall exports to Afghanistan coincided with an atmosphere of uncertainty regarding difficult security, political, and economic transitions which pervaded the country since the beginning of 2013.

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