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Cocoa beans harvested in Ghana. Photograph: Ange Aboa/Reuters |
The Labour party has urged the UK trade secretary, Liz Truss, to end delays over rollover deals with Kenya and Ghana to prevent them being slapped with high tariffs when the UK leaves the EU on 1 January.
Negotiations with Kenya and Ghana have yet to be
signed off with only nine weeks to go before the UK’s transition deal with the
EU comes to an end, when import charges would be imposed on goods worth £2.6bn
from the African countries.
Labour officials fear Truss is trying to drive a hard
bargain with individual nations that depend on foreign income
from sales of bananas, cocoa and flowers to the UK to make up for deals that
largely favour foreign imports.
With EU trade talks hanging in the balance and discussions
with the US barely started, the trade department signed a deal with
Japan last month that the shadow trade secretary, Emily
Thornberry, warned
massively favoured the world’s third-largest economy.
Shadow trade minister Gareth Thomas said in a letter to
Truss that he was concerned that the department’s attention had switched from
talks with the East African Community (EAC) trade bloc to bilateral deals with
individual countries.
He said that the failure to sign deals with Kenya and Ghana had
left them unable to plan for next year and, worse, the current proposals left
them facing duties on exports to the UK.
“The terms of the continuity agreements you have been
proposing would lead to new barriers to trade between both Ghana and her
neighbours in the Economic Community of West African States [ECOWAS] and similarly
would adversely affect trade between Kenya and other developing countries in
the EAC.
Cocoa beans harvested in Ghana. Photograph: Ange
Aboa/Reuters
The Labour party has urged the UK trade secretary, Liz Truss, to end delays
over rollover deals with Kenya and Ghana to prevent them being slapped with
high tariffs when the UK leaves the EU on 1 January.
Negotiations with Kenya and Ghana have yet to be
signed off with only nine weeks to go before the UK’s transition deal with the
EU comes to an end, when import charges would be imposed on goods worth £2.6bn
from the African countries.
Labour officials fear Truss is trying to drive a hard
bargain with individual nations that depend on foreign income
from sales of bananas, cocoa and flowers to the UK to make up for deals that
largely favour foreign imports.
With EU trade talks hanging in the balance and discussions
with the US barely started, the trade department signed a deal with
Japan last month that the shadow trade secretary, Emily
Thornberry, warned
massively favoured the world’s third-largest economy.
Shadow trade minister Gareth Thomas said in a letter to
Truss that he was concerned that the department’s attention had switched from
talks with the East African Community (EAC) trade bloc to bilateral deals with
individual countries.
He said that the failure to sign deals with Kenya and Ghana had
left them unable to plan for next year and, worse, the current proposals left
them facing duties on exports to the UK.
“The terms of the continuity agreements you have been
proposing would lead to new barriers to trade between both Ghana and her
neighbours in the Economic Community of West African States [ECOWAS] and
similarly would adversely affect trade between Kenya and other developing
countries in the EAC.
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