
Trump modifies tariff rate for Lesotho to 15% as small country reels from tariff impacts
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 U.S. 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 U.S. 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.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
6 minutes ago
- Reuters
Rwanda, Congo agree on outline for economic framework as part of peace deal
WASHINGTON/PARIS, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo on Friday agreed on an outline for the regional economic integration framework, according to the U.S. State Department, as the two countries take steps toward delivering on a peace deal signed in Washington last month. The tenets agreed on Friday summarize the framework, which includes elements of cooperation on energy, infrastructure, mineral supply chains, national parks and public health, the State Department said in a statement. Rwanda and Congo signed a peace deal in Washington in June at talks held by U.S. President Donald Trump's administration, which aims to bring an end to fighting that has killed thousands and attract billions of dollars of Western investment to a region rich in tantalum, gold, cobalt, copper, lithium and other minerals. As part of the deal, Kinshasa and Kigali agreed to launch a regional economic integration framework within 90 days, the agreement said. A source familiar with the matter said a preliminary draft of the framework has been agreed to and there would now be an input period to get reaction from the private sector and civil society before it is finalized. The framework is planned to be signed at a meeting of heads of state at the White House. No date has been set yet for that meeting, the source said. In the Friday statement, Rwanda and Congo affirmed that each country has "full, sovereign control" over the exploitation, processing and export of its natural resources and recognized the importance of developing mineral processing and transformation capacity within each country, according to a copy seen by Reuters. Kinshasa views the plundering of its mineral wealth as a key driver of the conflict between its forces and Rwanda-backed M23 rebels in eastern Congo. Reuters reported in May that Congolese minerals such as tungsten, tantalum and tin, which Kinshasa has long accused neighbouring Rwanda of illegally exploiting, could be exported legitimately to Rwanda for processing under the terms of the deal being negotiated by the U.S., according to sources. The two countries are committed to ensuring that the minerals trade no longer provides funding to armed groups and to create a world-class industrial mining sector in the region, as well as to ensure better cross-border interoperability on mineral supply chains, according to the statement. They also agreed to connect new infrastructure to the U.S.-backed Lobito Corridor, underscoring Washington's aim of greater access to resources in the region and efforts to counter China. The Ruzizi III hydropower project and Lake Kivu methane exploitation were the only specific projects mentioned in the statement, despite U.S. emphasis on critical minerals. The countries said they intended to prioritize financing for Ruzizi and work together to exploit the methane gas sustainably. Friday's announcement comes after the two countries held the first meeting of a joint oversight committee on Thursday in a step toward implementing the Washington peace deal even as other commitments are yet to be fulfilled. In the Washington agreement, the two African countries pledged to implement a 2024 deal that would see Rwandan troops withdraw from eastern Congo within 90 days. Congolese military operations targeting the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a Congo-based armed group that includes remnants of Rwanda's former army and militias that carried out a 1994 genocide, are meant to conclude over the same timeframe. The deal also said Congo and Rwanda would form a joint security coordination mechanism within 30 days and implement a plan agreed last year to monitor and verify the withdrawal of Rwandan soldiers within three months. But 30 days from the signing has passed without a meeting of the joint security coordination mechanism. The source familiar with the matter said the joint security coordination mechanism meeting would be held on August 7 in Addis Ababa. Congo is also involved in direct talks with M23 hosted by Qatar, and last month the two sides pledged to sign a separate peace agreement by August 18, though many outstanding details need to be negotiated.


Metro
8 minutes ago
- Metro
Trump moves nuclear submarines and threatens Russia over 'foolish' statements
President Donald Trump has ordered two nuclear submarines to berepositioned after what he called 'foolish and inflammatory statements' from Russia. Trump announced his command on Friday, citing 'highly provocative statements' from former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who now serves as deputy chairman of the Security Council of the Russian Federation. 'I have ordered two Nuclear Submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that,' wrote Trump on his Truth Social platform. 'Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences, I hope this will not be one of those instances. 'Thank you for your attention to this matter!' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Four dead in mass shooting at Montana bar with gunman on the loose MORE: Moment manhole shoots fire onto street as terrified pedestrians run MORE: Ghislaine Maxwell quietly moved out of Florida prison while seeking Trump pardon


Times
8 minutes ago
- Times
Trump evicts his own wife in White House ballroom blitz
Melania Trump will need to find new office space after her husband's plans take over the White House CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES It may be hard to imagine, but Donald Trump's plans for a new ballroom in the White House might be less than romantic. The list of people being evicted by the project in the building's east wing happens to include his wife. Melania will need new office space in Washington, which is a shame as her reading of the news from Ukraine has made her one of the president's more effective foreign policy advisers. In fact, there is fresh evidence of Mr Trump's need for help with foreign affairs. His administration has said 'upwards of 200 countries' contacted them about tariffs, which must be news to the US State Department as their website only lists 197 independent states. Perhaps Trump is including uninhabited Antarctic territories which he has also tariffed. Some nations may be recognising Palestine, but Trump is doing the same for penguins. Comedian Frank Skinner was pleased when the King invoked 'It's coming home' this week, because the phrase was rather absent from the Lionesses' Euros campaign. The words are from the song Skinner co-wrote for Euro '96 and he thinks politics is behind its disappearance. 'Someone who worked for the FA told me that … members from other football associations had said it is very jingoistic to suggest that England is the home of football,' Skinner said on Frank Off the Radio. Maybe, or perhaps it's because our women bring football home so regularly that they've rendered the song obsolete? 'Four years of hurt' doesn't sound too bad, but Skinner can rely on the men's team to keep topping up their hurt-o-meter. • Sarina Wiegman boogies to Burna Boy at England Euros parade in London Reshuffle fever is still untreatable in SW1A, but always be wary of such rumours. Former deputy cabinet secretary Helen MacNamara tells the Institute for Government she would 'mischievously' get tongues wagging by randomly wheeling out the reshuffle 'whiteboard' which charts who has what job. 'It used to sit in the corner of my office, shrouded in a sheet,' she said. 'I'd take the sheet off it, and somebody coming in would be like 'What's going on?'' Gossip could get out of hand. In one reshuffle, a minister was thought to be in line for a move, but returned from Downing Street with the same job, and was bemused that civil servants had taken his name off the door and packed his possessions into a box. The novelist Philip Pullman is not generating much hype for his forthcoming memoir. 'I haven't been anywhere and I've not done very much — all I've done is sit in a room and write books,' he told an event given by bookseller Waterstones and publisher Scholastic, who'll have to work on some better blurb. Pullman is marking 30 years of the His Dark Materials trilogy, and 40 years of working with his editor David Fickling. The latter was still green in publishing when he read his first Pullman manuscript. 'I've just read the most amazing book,' he told a colleague at Oxford University Press. 'What am I supposed to do now?' His colleague looked up from the dictionary he was compiling and replied: 'I think you're supposed to publish it.' The RAF has appointed Suraya Marshall to the rank of Air Vice-Marshal. This means that there are now two Marshal Marshalls in the force, as her husband Allan Marshall is Air Marshal Marshall. That's one for General Knowledge.