The Citizen (Gauteng)

Boost for wool, mohair farmers

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Mohair sales in Lesotho, which produces a fifth of the world’s supply of the luxury fibre, have restarted after the government buckled to pressure from farmers and ended a controvers­ial monopoly handed to a Chinese entreprene­ur.

The first auction conducted by locally-owned Maluti Wool and Mohair Centre took place on October 7 and the first shipments of the fibre were made on Thursday, said David Telford, the company’s managing director.

Record prices were achieved, and farmers will be paid by next Monday, he said.

The sale eases a crisis that left most of an estimated 48 000 wool and mohair farmers without earnings for more than a year after Guohui Shi and his Lesotho Wool Centre were unable to pay for the product they bought. Wool and mohair are Lesotho’s main exports. Shi didn’t answer a call made to his cellphone.

“We are trying to get some money back into the system and get the wheels turning. The industry was on its knees,” said Telford, whose company fired 300 workers after the monopoly was awarded to Guoshui Shi.

“We have also suffered, but not as much as the farmers who could not put food on the table.”

While the government has ended the monopoly, it’s still insisting that wool and mohair be auctioned locally rather than being sold in South Africa, which had been the practice for decades.

South Africa’s BKB Mohair controlled most of the market and is now advising Maluti.

Auctioning the fibre in Lesotho increases costs and, while internatio­nal mohair buyers may travel there, its wool industry is less likely to attract interest because it’s smaller than many global competitor­s.

Maluti is yet to start selling wool. South Africa produces half of the world’s mohair and runs the biggest auction globally in the coastal town of Port Elizabeth.

“The farmers will get their money and that’s the main thing,” said Isak Staats, general manager for wool and mohair at BKB. “Its an expensive solution. You are doubling the infrastruc­ture.” – Bloomberg

Moneyweb

Icasa is required to ensure wide coverage of sporting events in the “public interest”, that views are fair and diverse and broadly representi­ng South African society. The various regulation­s to monitor and control telecommun­ications and broadcasti­ng had been in place for some time and appeared to be working. Or, at least, broadcaste­rs could manage their way around the regulation­s, without being brought to a halt.

However, in December 2018, Icasa issued radically new draft regulation­s. Icasa had not identified any problem, nor had any internatio­nal benchmarki­ng been undertaken, based on measurable indicators.

Icasa has since received voluminous submission­s. It is highly unlikely that Icasa has the capacity to properly deal with these.

The draft regulation­s follow the same vein as the Independen­t Communicat­ions Authority and the Electronic Communicat­ions Act in using vague and indetermin­ate

We are trying to get some money back into the system and get the wheels turning. The industry was on its knees.

David Telford Managing director of Maluti Wool and Mohair Centre

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