Kenya-Germany complete Labour Mobility Negotiations

Business
By Noel Nabiswa | May 17, 2024
Kenya's PS Shadrack Mwadime and German's Dr.Joachim Stamp signing the agreed finalised draft of the Bilateral Later Agreement in Nairobi yesterday.[Photo, Courtesy]

Kenya and Germany have successfully concluded the negotiations of the draft Comprehensive Migration and Mobility Partnership Agreement.

A deal that if signed will see streamlines in labour migration rules, opening the doors for employment opportunities for professional, skilled and semi-skilled workers in Germany was signed after negotiations took place in Nairobi on May 14 and 15.

Shadrack Mwadime, Principal Secretary for Labour and Skills Development headed the Kenyan delegation while PS Roseline Njogu of Diaspora Affairs was the lead negotiator on Kenya's side.

The German Federal Republic delegation on the other hand was led by Doctor Joachim Stamp, the Special Commissioner for Migration Agreements, and Holger Schamberg from the Ministry of Interior and Community.

"Being an international bilateral agreement, the draft agreement shall be subjected to the relevant internal legal and procedural checks by both governments," stated the officials in a joint statement communique.

The official signing is scheduled for September 2024 as the implementation of the agreement will commence with a job fair in Nairobi.

PS Mwadime affirmed his commitment to the process which he said will smoothen the labour mobility for Kenyans.

"We are committed to developing a clear framework to allow migration of Kenyan skilled workers in a safe, orderly, and regular manner. This will ease mobility and fastrack migration between the two countries." PS Mwadime said.

The two countries agreed to form the joint committee in February this year following a meeting held in Berlin between Labour CS Florence Bore and her German counterpart Hubertus Heil.

The ongoing negotiations result from the initiative conceptualized between President William Ruto and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

During the first meeting, CS Bore informed the German government of the measures in place to streamline Labour Migration through the restructuring of its policies and legal and institutional framework to support seamless Migration and mobility with Germany.

"Kenya seeks to fill the skills deficit in Germany's labour market with its well-trained, qualified, hardworking and disciplined labour force in various fields of ICT, health care, construction, engineering, agriculture and hospitality among others. We are able and ready to supply the required labour to fill in the skills deficient in your labour market," said the CS.

Share this story
Kenya tightens grip on crypto with Sh500m capital rule
Kenya plans to tighten the regulation of cryptocurrencies by requiring virtual asset service providers to meet high capital and licensing thresholds under the new VASP framework.
New law aims to protect internal auditors, strengthen public oversight
Kenya is on track to enact a landmark Internal Auditors Act, designed to shield the profession from litigation, and executive interference, while strengthening public-sector accountability.
Ruto launches Sh5.5 billion plan to revamp Voi-Taveta metre gauge railway
President William Ruto has launched the rehabilitation of the Voi-Mwatate-Taveta railway line that ceased operations nearly 20 years ago.
Why underwriting is shifting as risk grows more complex
The significant shift in underwriting today is the move from a reactive, backward-looking function to a predictive discipline, that anticipates emerging risks and helps businesses build resilience.
World Bank approves Sh71 billion for Isiolo-Mandera road construction
The World Bank has approved Sh71 billion loan for the development of the Isiolo-Mandera road corridor.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS