President Obama withdrew the country’s eligibility for the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) last Thursday. Michael Froman, the US trade representative, explained that the decision was taken in light of Swaziland’s continuing labour rights abuses. AGOA status enables countries in sub-Saharan Africa to get duty-free access to the US market on thousands of products, making it cheaper to enter the USD 3 trillion import market.
The ITF has long campaigned for improved workers’ rights in Swaziland, most recently campaigning for the release of imprisoned union lawyer Basil Thwala. During a March 2014 visit to the country, ITF assistant general secretary Stuart Howard led a high-level mission to the country, which met with government representatives and US embassy officials. Howard said: “In March, we personally warned the government that its denial of union rights was likely to lead to its losing AGOA. They refused to listen. Now they're paying the consequences.”
While Thwala was released just days before the US Department of Trade was scheduled to review the AGOA agreement, unions including the ITF-affiliated Swaziland Transport & Allied Workers’ Union (STAWU) continue to face government harassment.
US axes Swazi trade deal over rights abuses
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2026年国際労働者追悼日:亡くなった仲間に思いを馳せ、今を生きる労働者のために闘おう
Every year on 28 April, we stop, we remember, we recommit.
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船員の皆さん、私たちは皆さんと共にあります
2026年3月13日配信 ペルシャ湾とオマーン湾で船員の生命が危険にさらされる中、世界の海運関係労組と海運業界は船員の保護・支援のために尽力している。 「船員の皆さん、あなたたちは一人ではありません。私たちは皆さんと共にあります」これは、世界の海運労使から船員へのメッセージだ。 ペルシャ湾とオマーン湾で商船に対する攻撃が激化している。ホルムズ海峡では過去 48 時間以内に少なくとも 6
