New international flight launching in South Africa
South African Airways (SAA) has announced that it will launch its first-ever direct service between Cape Town and Mauritius in December.
Lesotho has received a modified tariff rate of 15% Thursday from United States President Donald Trump as the nation continued to reel from high tariffs the administration had threatened to implement earlier this year.
In an executive order, Trump modified reciprocal tariff rates for dozens of countries, including Lesotho, which had been under threat of a 50% rate since April, the highest of any US trading partner.
The Trump administration defended its tariff rate on the mountain kingdom in Southern Africa as reciprocal, stating that Lesotho charged 99% tariffs on U.S. goods.
Lesotho officials have said they do not know how the White House arrived at that figure.
After announcing the barrage of reciprocal tariffs in April, the administration paused implementation to give countries time to negotiate.
Under the tariff threat and uncertainty, many US importers canceled orders of Lesotho-produced textiles, leading to mass layoffs.
“If we still have these high tariffs, it means we must forget about producing for the U.S. and go as fast as we can…(looking for) other available markets,” Teboho Kobeli, owner of Afri-Expo, which makes jeans for export, told Reuters earlier this year.
South African Airways (SAA) has announced that it will launch its first-ever direct service between Cape Town and Mauritius in December.
With most local fuel refineries having shut down and airports being hamstrung by dated legislation to get alternative sources, South Africa could run out of jet fuel by October.
The latest population estimates from Stats SA show a mass migration to Gauteng over the last 20 years, with the province’s population surging 73% since 2002.