
Cape Town's Newest Stay Comes With Art, Attitude & a Side of Fire
The lifestyle arm of Hilton Hotels has officially landed in South Africa, opening its first-ever Canopy by Hilton in the heart of Cape Town's buzzing Longkloof district.
Set in a reimagined historic building on Park Road, the 154-room property blends urban energy with local flair—from its red-brick façade and curated South African art to interiors dotted with bold prints and artisan-crafted furnishings.
The hotel offers a direct connection to the creative pulse of the City Bowl, with everything from Table Mountain to Clifton's beaches just minutes away.
At the centre of it all is Ongetem, the hotel's signature restaurant and bar. Led by acclaimed local chef Bertus Basson, Ongetem channels the spirit of Cape Town with fearless flavours, flame-grilled meats, handcrafted cocktails and a culinary attitude best described as untamed.
Guests can borrow complimentary Canopy bikes to cruise the neighbourhood or explore nearby design shops, galleries, and scenic hotspots—with local insider tips from the hotel team.
This debut marks the first Canopy by Hilton in South Africa, joining a growing list of global openings in Seychelles, Nashville, and soon, Lagos and Tokyo.

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Egypt Independent
4 hours ago
- Egypt Independent
Trump's tariffs are sending African countries into China's hands
Africa is adjusting to the new reality of US President Donald Trump's tariffs, with countries on the continent facing some of the highest export charges. But what could become a crisis is an opportunity for United States rival China, which has long courted African countries and is now offering them a lifeline. 'We (Africa) are going straight into the hands of China,' Nigerian economist Bismarck Rewane told CNN. 'That is the unfortunate outcome,' Rewane said of Africa's expected further shift toward China, which has emerged in recent years as the continent's largest bilateral trading partner. Four African nations – Libya, South Africa, Algeria and Tunisia – face some of the steepest tariffs imposed by the Trump administration, with charges on exports ranging from 25 percent to 30 percent. Eighteen other countries from the continent were hit with 15 percent levies, a modified tariff package released Thursday by the White House showed. In April, when the US import levies were first announced, Trump pitched them as 'reciprocal' and targeting countries that he said had trade deficits with the US. But Trump instead based his tariffs on countries' trade deficits with the United States – not the tariffs they charge. South Africa, one of the continent's powerhouses, challenged the imposition of a 30 percent tariff on its US-bound exports, saying Trump's decision was not based on 'an accurate representation of available trade data.' An opportunity for China China has offered to soften the impact of US tariffs on Africa, saying in June it would halt charges on imports for nearly all its African partners. 'There is no other opportunity for African countries to strengthen South-South trade (among developing nations) than now,' South African researcher Neo Letswalo told CNN, while urging countries to 'solely turn to China and make it the next US.' 'America is gradually forfeiting its global leadership status,' Letswalo said, adding that the more countries 'become less dependent on the US, the greater opportunity for China to become an alternative.' Before the tariff deadline, the US did not make a trade deal with any African nation despite efforts from the continent to avoid the tariffs, underscoring Africa's place on the White House's priority list. Letswalo described America's failure to negotiate a deal with Africa as 'an open goal for China.' The impact of Trump's tariffs is already being felt in some of Africa's most buoyant economies and some of the continent's poorest, such as Lesotho, which was slapped with a 15 percent tariff. It had previously been hit with a 50 percent tariff – one of the steepest rates – before the charges were modified. Lesotho's Prime Minister Samuel Matekane said in June that the huge tariff, combined with the halt of US aid to the nation of just over 2 million people, 'have crippled industries that previously sustained thousands of jobs.' Trump has described Lesotho, a landlocked nation surrounded by South Africa, as a country 'nobody has ever heard of' – even though trade between the US and Lesotho totaled over $240 million last year, mostly in textiles. A worker executes her duties at the Afri-Expo Textile Factory, which makes clothing for the U.S. market, on the outskirts of Maseru, the capital of Lesotho, July 9, 2025. Siyabonga Sishi/Reuters Before the tariffs, Lesotho benefited from a US trade agreement that allowed it and other eligible sub-Saharan countries to export goods to the US duty-free. Authorities in Lesotho have declared a two-year national state of disaster over the tariffs, as the country braces for their impact, with the textile industry already grappling with massive job losses. Thousands of roles are also threatened in Lesotho's richer neighbor, South Africa, where citrus growers said they were gripped with 'great anxiety' ahead of the August 1 tariff deadline. In a statement this week, the country's Citrus Growers' Association (CGA) warned that 'job losses will be a certainty' if the tariffs came into effect. It added that, 'hundreds of thousands of cartons of citrus are ready in packhouses to be shipped to the US over the next few weeks,' and that implementing the charges 'will mean most of this fruit will be left unsold.' Distribution workers pack tangerines at Goede Hoop Citrus in Citrusdal, Western Cape province, South Africa, July 9, 2025. Esa Alexander/Reuters Other industries in South Africa, such as the automobile sector, also face the risk of economic shocks, analysts said. 'Already, we have companies within the automobile sector threatening to leave (the country) as a result of plummeting business,' Letswalo said. 'The tariffs will add to the burden of pre-existing issues, and if these entities decide to exit South Africa, our already existing unemployment calamities will worsen,' he said. Gwede Mantashe, South Africa's minister of mineral and petroleum resources, told reporters Tuesday that other routes are being sought for South African goods. 'If the US imposes high tariffs, we must look for alternative markets,' he said. 'Our biggest trading partner is China, not the US. The US is number two,' Mantashe added. As South Africa scouts for broader opportunities, however, the citrus growers' group has voiced its reservations, specifically that their products suit designated markets so finding another is not straightforward. Its CEO, Boitshoko Ntshabele, told CNN in a statement that 'the US market remains a priority, and so should improving access to China' and elsewhere. 'There is a deep appreciation of South African citrus by US consumers. Since 2017, our exports to that market have almost doubled. The market has immense potential,' Ntshabele added. Is reliance on China risky? Letswalo believes there are accompanying risks behind the enticing option of relying on Beijing to cushion the impact of Trump's tariffs. Alternating US with China 'could be risky,' he said, 'especially for some nascent industries within the (African) countries.' 'If they're not protected, Chinese products will flood and outcompete them as many African countries are price sensitive markets,' he warned. A large batch of goods, including dump trucks, is assembled at the Yantai Port for export to Africa on July 7, 2025 in Yantai, Shandong Province of China. Tang Ke/VCG/Getty Images China has imposed some imbalanced trade deals of its own in Africa with trade deficits skewed in its favor, according to the China-Global South Project (CGSP), an organization monitoring China's engagement with developing countries. Additionally, the bulk of Beijing's exports to Africa comprise mainly manufactured products, while the continent's exports to China are commonly raw materials. South Africa's Ramaphosa advocated for balanced trade with China when he met his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in Beijing last year. Letswalo advised that, while Africa leans on China for trade, it must also seek domestic alternatives. He recommended a swift implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), an agreement signed by nations on the continent to boost trade among themselves. Although established in 2020, implementing AfCFTA has been slow, with just over 20 countries of the continent's 55 trading under the deal. Rewane believes that the US tariffs could inspire Africa 'to build economic resilience and be less dependent on lopsided trade.' Above all, he added, the continent must be 'more inward-looking rather than outward-dependent.'


Daily News Egypt
14-07-2025
- Daily News Egypt
Botswana Devalues Pula Amid Global Diamond Market Slump
Botswana has announced a 2.76% devaluation of its national currency, the pula, as part of a revised monetary strategy to soften the blow of the ongoing global downturn in diamond demand, a senior finance official confirmed Thursday. The country, which operates a flexible exchange rate regime reviewed biannually, links the pula to a currency basket that includes the South African rand. The new adjustment—up from the 1.51% devaluation set in December 2024—is intended to boost the competitiveness of local products and curb rising demand for foreign currency. Despite being regarded as one of Africa's most stable economies, Botswana's GDP contracted by 3% in 2024 due to a sharp decline in diamond exports, which form the backbone of its economy. Further contraction is expected in 2025. Said Tsimono, a Ministry of Finance official, said that dwindling foreign currency reserves have placed the country's exchange rate framework under pressure. Reserves now cover just five months of imports, down from more than ten months previously, according to a June report by BMI Research. President Duma Boko approved the currency devaluation, signaling the government's commitment to sustaining macroeconomic stability. Analysts believe that while challenges persist, Botswana remains in a stronger position compared to regional peers such as Nigeria and Angola, which have faced severe foreign currency shortages in recent years.


Egypt Independent
13-07-2025
- Egypt Independent
xAI issues lengthy apology for violent and antisemitic Grok social media posts
CNN — Elon Musk's artificial intelligence company xAI issued a lengthy apology Saturday for a series of violent and antisemitic posts from its Grok chatbot this week, blaming a system update. 'First off, we deeply apologize for the horrific behavior that many experienced,' the company wrote. xAI says a system update had chatbot Grok refer to 'existing X user posts; including when such posts contained extremist views,' caused it to issue responses that praised Adolf Hitler, repeated conspiracy theories and spewed longstanding antisemitic tropes. In a series of posts early Saturday on Grok's official X account, the company said the coding change update was active for 16 hours. The incident underscored many of the dangers of AI, a nascent technology that critics and tech evangelists both say could upend the global economy and cause significant social upheaval along the way. Grok spouted antisemitic tropes and white nationalist talking points earlier this week in response to user prompts. xAI froze the chatbot's X account on Tuesday evening, though users could still talk to the bot on the private tab. 'We have removed that deprecated code and refactored the entire system to prevent further abuse,' xAI said. According to xAI, the problematic instructions were: 'You tell it like it is and you are not afraid to offend people who are politically correct,' 'Understand the tone, context and language of the post. Reflect that in your response,' and 'Reply to the post just like a human, keep it engaging, don't repeat the information which is already present in the original post.' Those instructions steered Grok 'to ignore its core values in certain circumstances in order to make the response engaging to the user,' xAI said. 'In particular, the instruction to 'follow the tone and context' of the X user undesirably caused the @grok functionality to prioritize adhering to prior posts in the thread, including any unsavory posts, as opposed to responding responsibly or refusing to respond to unsavory requests,' the company said. As the company issued its explanation, it turned Grok's X account back on, meaning the bot was back to engaging with users publicly on X. Grok's antisemitic turn was not the first time the AI had veered into controversy. In May, the bot began bringing up claims of 'white genocide' in South Africa to completely unrelated prompts. The company later said a 'rogue employee' was behind the change. Musk was born and raised in South Africa and has a history of arguing that a 'white genocide' was committed in the nation, a claim that has been rejected by a South African court and by experts.