3 African Countries Agree To Ban Secondhand Clothes Imports From UK, US (VIDEO)

3 African Countries Agree To Ban Secondhand Clothes Imports From UK, US
Three African countries – Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda – have agreed to ban second-hand clothing, mostly imported from the US and UK, in order to support their own textile industries.
In March 2016, the head of states in the East African Community (EAC), which comprises of Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan, had agreed to ban import of used clothes in the region in three years as part of the EAC Vision 2050 and the Industrialization Policy to enhance a manufacturing sector that currently contributes 8.7% to the regional Gross Domestic Product to 25% by 2032.
The countries are hoping that local factories will create much-needed jobs and increase exports.
But the US has claimed that the proposed ban goes too far and violates the free trade agreements under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which aims to expand trade and investment on the continent.
According to Aljazeera, the three countries are now facing threats of trade sanctions from the US who says the ban violates free-trade agreements.
DW also reports that at a summit last Friday in Uganda’s capital Kampala, leaders agreed on a compromise in response to the pressure from Washington.
According to them, second-hand imports will not be directly banned, but import taxes will still need to be paid.
In addition, they want to invest more money in their own textile industry.
“The members of the East African Community should promote their textile industry by using measures which do not jeopardize the benefits of AGOA membership,” they said in the meeting’s closing communique.
 It is still unclear whether the US intends to go along with its threats.
But even if the EAC is excluded from the AGOA by the US, it probably won’t pose much of a risk, according to Rodgers Mukwaya from the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA).
 “Most countries in Eastern Africa benefited very little from AGOA — with the exception of Kenya.,” he says, ” AGOA has not had a strong benefit for countries in Eastern Africa. So any ban from the US will not have a big effect on the exports from Eastern Africa.”

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