Sub-Saharan Africa
Sputnik brings you all the most recent information, major events, heroes and views, including breaking news, images, videos, analyses, and features.

Tanzania, India to Collaborate on Launching Car Assemby Facility in African Country, Reports Say

CC BY 2.0 / D-Stanley / Dar es Salaam, TanzaniaDar es Salaam, Tanzania
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania - Sputnik Africa, 1920, 06.12.2023
Subscribe
In October, Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the Indian capital of New Delhi. During the meeting, they discussed the reinforcement of the bilateral relations in fields of defense, trade, investment, maritime security, and others.
The Tanzanian company GF Automobile and the Indian firm Mahindra & Mahindra will collaborate on launching a car assembling plant in the African country, media reported.
The joint investment for the project, set to start in six months, amounts to approximately $3,9 million (10 billion Tanzanian shillings), the outlet said.
"This investment means job creation, taxes for the government, and boosting individual Tanzanian economies," Tanzanian Minister of State in the President's Office (Planning and Investment), Kitila Mkumbo was quoted by the media as saying.
GF Automobile's head, Imran Karmali, emphasized that the plant aims to lower car costs, making brand-new vehicles more affordable for Tanzanians, according to the report
"These cars will also be new (0 kilometres). I suggest the governments should attract these investments by discouraging the importation of used cars," Karmali added.
A plant for making bioethanol, for addition to petrol - Sputnik Africa, 1920, 26.11.2023
Sub-Saharan Africa
Indian Company Ready to Share Expertise on Biofuel Technology With Tanzania: Reports
The head of the company also highlighted that the facility is expected to assemble four-seater cars, pickups, other passenger vehicles, along with other Mahindra & Mahindra products, the media revealed.
Regarding car importation, mentioned by Karmali, Mkumbo reportedly underlined that "the government will also review its policy on importing cars," noting that currently, it is "allowed to import any car, even if it has been used for 100 years, with higher taxes being charged."
Apart from this plant, the Indian enterprise agreed to establish a tractor assembly facility in Tanzania.
The Tanzania-Indian partnership in the automobile industry was among the issues discussed by the leader of the African country and India's prime minister at their meeting in October, according to the outlet.
Additionally, during the visit, the two states expressed their willingness to increase bilateral trade in local currencies.
Newsfeed
0