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MAURITIUS:
Talks on Zimbabwe and AGOA with the US
IRIN
News
May 11, 2004
JOHANNESBURG - Mauritian
Prime Minister Paul Berenger is to discuss Zimbabwe and the Africa Growth
and Opportunities Act (AGOA) with US President George Bush in Washington
on Wednesday, a senior official told IRIN.
"As Mauritius assumes
the chairmanship of the Southern African Development Community (SADC)
in August, Zimbabwe is one of the likely issues to be raised. The issue
has been blocked for some time, with SADC countries holding a position
contrary to the one held by the Commonwealth and the developed countries
on Zimbabwe," Kewe Chung, an advisor to Berenger, said on Tuesday.
The SADC voiced its dissent from the Commonwealth's decision to continue
Zimbabwe's suspension after the 54-member organisation deemed the March
2002 presidential elections unfair and marred by violence.
Mauritius is one of the leading textile exporters in the region and Berenger
will also discuss sourcing raw materials for its textile exports from
non-AGOA "third party" countries.
AGOA has provided duty- and quota-free access for a wide range of products
from African countries that meet US political and economic requirements.
To qualify for eligibility, countries should source raw materials for
their exports to the US locally or regionally. The US has allowed African
countries to import raw materials from non-AGOA countries, but this preferential
condition expires on 30 September.
A bill introduced last November in the US Senate extended AGOA benefits
until 2015, and for the next four years permitted raw materials to be
imported from non-AGOA countries. Another bill, introduced to Congress
in the same month, extended AGOA to 2020 and allowed "third party" fabrics
for a further three years. But both pieces of legislation have stalled.
Ownership of the Chagos archipelago in the Indian Ocean is also on Berenger's
agenda. Diego Garcia, where the US has its only military base in the Indian
Ocean, is one of the islands in the group. The US has leased the island
from Britain, Mauritius' former colonial power, since the early 1970s,
but Mauritius claimed the archipelago should be returned after gaining
independence in 1968.
Chung said Berenger would not contest the right of the US to retain its
military base on Diego Garcia.
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