Lesotho’s Trade Minister urges rethink of global trade amid the tariff crisis

17 May 2025

Lesotho’s Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr Mokhethi Shelile. Photo: Contributed.

By Moses Magadza

WINDHOEK, NAMIBIA – The Kingdom of Lesotho’s Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr Mokhethi Shelile, has advocated for a radical reimagining of global trade, warning that the recent imposition of reciprocal tariffs by the United States threatens to unravel years of progress in inclusive trade across the Southern African region.

Speaking at the High-Level Dialogue on Trade Justice held in Sandton, South Africa, Mr Shelile warned that the new U.S. tariffs, among them a 10% blanket duty on all imports, signal “a deepening economic nationalism and a widening chasm between the Global North and the aspirations of our people in the Global South.”

“These tariffs threaten to undo years of progress toward inclusive and sustainable trade in our region,” the Minister cautioned, addressing the gathering of policy makers, academics, civil society actors and parliamentarians.

The Minister highlighted how Lesotho’s economy, particularly its women-dominated textile sector, is poised to be negatively impacted.

“In Lesotho, over 80% of apparel exports to the United States are channelled through AGOA. Thousands of women in the textile sector risk job losses if these trade disruptions continue. This is not theory. This is livelihood, dignity, and survival,” he said.

The Minister argued that the tariffs crisis presented an opportunity to redefine trade itself, not just its terms but its purpose.

“For too long, Africa’s integration into global markets has been shaped by extractive models that export raw materials, import finished goods, and leave our people, especially women, excluded from value chains,” he said.

He added, “We must transition from being exporters of labour and materials to producers of prosperity, especially for our women and youth.”

Citing feminist scholar Dr. Amina Mama, he reminded delegates that “development cannot be sustainable if it ignores the structures of inequality. Trade is no exception.”

The Minister called for renewed commitment to the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). He said it should be seen not merely as a technical agreement, but as a transformative social compact.

“AfCFTA must be about women-led enterprises, informal economy workers, and ecologically sustainable production,” he stated adding, “Lesotho is currently developing an implementation strategy that prioritizes women traders, MSMEs, and green industrialisation.”

He urged regional collaboration to monitor AfCFTA outcomes through a gender-sensitive lens and cautioned that the agreement must not reproduce the same hierarchies of exclusion that have long plagued global trade.

With AGOA set to expire in September 2025, the Minister highlighted the need for a united African position that transcends dependence on preferential trade.

“While AGOA has opened export opportunities, it has also reinforced dependencies. We must ask: what comes next? We need a bold African position, not just on AGOA renewal but on the kind of trade regime we want.”

He advocated for trade policies grounded in feminist political economy, Afro-ecofeminism, and Pan-African sovereignty.

“Trade must work for people, not profits. Trade must nourish communities, not deplete ecosystems. Trade must empower women, not entrench patriarchy.”

The Minister outlined Lesotho’s commitments to the cause of trade justice: integrating equity and ecological principles into national trade policy;  ensuring women cross-border traders participate in policy-making and negotiations; partnering with SADC PF to reinforce regional parliamentary oversight of trade; and supporting a Regional Trade Justice Framework that reflects the needs of women, youth and marginalised communities.

Quoting environmental icon Wangari Maathai, the Minister said: “In the course of history, there comes a time when humanity is called to shift to a new level of consciousness. That time is now.”

-Moses Magadza is the Media and Communications Manager at the SADC PF.

Last Posts

Leaders of the Alliance of Sahel States -Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger

Sahel Rising: The AES Confederation’s Defiant March Toward Sovereignty, Security, and Revolutionary Transformation

By Cde Mafa Kwanisai Mafa Amid intensifying efforts to undermine the Sahelian revolution through destabilisation, propaganda, and psychological warfare, the Confederation of Sahel States Alliance of Sahel States is not retreating. It is consolidating. Far…

17 May 2025

BPP President Motlatsi Molapise and Secretary General, Mantlha Sankoloba

BPP gears for leadership forum in Francistown, reaffirms role in UDC leadership

The Pan Afrikanist Watchman Francistown, Botswana — The Botswana People’s Party (BPP) will convene a Leadership Forum on Saturday, April 25, 2026, at Bluetown Hall in Francistown as part of efforts to revive its organizational…

17 May 2025

Seretse and Ruth

Sir Seretse Khama: The Architect of a Nation’s Destiny

By Singh Gurjeet The year was 1921. In the heart of Serowe, the earth lay cracked and thirsty, its dust rising like whispers of forgotten prayers. The air was heavy, drifting across the village as…

17 May 2025

Fatherland or Death! Cuba will achieve victory in defense of sovereignty and socialism

Girón, today and forever! As long as there is a woman and a man willing to give their life for the Revolution, we’ll be victorious! Cuba lives under the constant siege of the United States…

17 May 2025

Rosie Motene lands in Mahalapye, where history breathes, and dreams begin

By Rosie Motene Mahalapye is a village that speaks softly, but if you are listening, it teaches you everything. This past Easter weekend, I visited for the first time. I arrived with Clive G, a…

17 May 2025

Donald Trump's New World Order -Pic (The Heat)

America’s “Allies” Are Its Victims: Why Africa Must Reject Imperial Security Traps and Embrace a New Global Path

By Mafa Kwanisai Mafa There is a brutal truth that Africa must finally face without fear or politeness: the so-called “security partnerships” offered by the United States are not protection agreements. They are instruments of…

17 May 2025

Related Stories