Times of Eswatini

SA pushes to be kept in AGOA

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JOHANNESBU­RG - Minister of Trade and Industry Ebrahim Patel says they will push for South Africa to be retained in the African Growth and Opportunit­y Act (AGOA) amid tensions between Pretoria and Washington. Patel said AGOA was approved by the US Congress, but they have been in discussion­s with the Biden administra­tion on extension being granted to South Africa.

Patel was invited to Washington last December, where he was asked to put forward the case for Africa.

He said he made a presentati­on on behalf of the continent on the need to extend the preferenti­al trade deal.

He said they would continue to engage the US on the need to keep South Africa in AGOA. He said they valued the trade relations with the US.

“We will be working closely with the US administra­tion in making the case why South Africa should remain in AGOA and we hope that we are successful,” said Patel.

AGOA is due to expire in 2025, but questions have been raised following tensions between South Africa and the US after allegation­s by Reuben Bridgety of arms sales to Russia.

The US ambassador was called into a meeting by Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation Minister Naledi Pandor, where she expressed her strong objections to his allegation­s.

Pandor had a discussion with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on the matter.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has promised to appoint a retired judge to lead an inquiry into the claims by the US ambassador.

But Defence Minister Thandi Modise denied the allegation­s in Parliament on Tuesday, where she said nothing was loaded on the Russian ship.

Patel, who was briefing the media in Cape Town ahead of his budget vote speech on Wednesday, said they would push for South Africa to be kept as a member of AGOA.

He said he shared fears by Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana that if South Africa was kicked out of AGOA it would lose substantia­lly on the export market.

“On Agoa, on whether I share the concerns raised by the minister of finance, I do share those concerns. There is a significan­t part of South Africa’s exports to the US that is under AGOA. It is not all the products. The bulk of products are under MEN access to the US, that is the most favoured nation.

“To put it simply it’s under the World Trade Organisati­on rules. But there is a portion of the exports where we have a special preference and that special preference is under AGOA. We should do everything possible to retain that. It strengthen­s the position of South African exporters in the US market and that helps to create more jobs locally,” said Patel.

He said he was working closely with Godongwana on the matter.

Godongwana returned from a trip to the US recently with Ramaphosa’s national security advisor Sydney Mufamadi and director-general in the Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation Zane Dangor to resolve difference­s between the two countries.

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