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President Donald Trump said he may boycott the November G20 summit in South Africa due to ongoing diplomatic tensions and ...
President Donald Trumpsaid on Tuesday he might skip the upcoming Group of 20 (G20) leaders' summit in South Africa in ...
A top South African diplomat said on Tuesday that U.S. demands on domestic affirmative action policies were complicating ...
US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday imposing reciprocal tariffs ranging from 10% to 41% on US imports from dozens of countries and foreign locations.
South Africa is racing to finalise a trade deal with the US before punitive 30% tariffs come into effect on Friday, 1 August.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa will host the G20 Leaders’ Summit in November, making it the first to take place on African soil.
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Daily Maverick on MSNTrump tariffs – D-day for South Africa and its economic relations with the USWith the 1 August deadline upon us and no trade agreement yet, experts agree that relations between South Africa and the US would need a reset and cool heads to negotiate.
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AP Newsroom on MSNSouth Africa starts injecting rhino horns with radioactive material to curb poachingA South African university launched an anti-poaching campaign on Thursday to inject the horns of rhinos with radioactive isotopes that it said were harmless for the animals but which can be detected ...
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Briefly on MSNDonald Trump to skip G20 meeting in South Africa, maintains that some citizens are being persecutedDonald Trump reiterated his claims that a certain section of the South African population were being killed, saying he won't ...
Cover Media US on MSN1d
Trump May Skip G20 in South Africa, Slams Pretoria's PoliciesPresident Donald Trump says he may skip the G20 summit in South Africa this November, citing what he called “very bad ...
IOL takes a look at the potential fallout of Trump's 30% trade tariffs on South Africa's economy, which could jeopardise ...
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Africanews on MSNTrump may skip G20 summit in South Africa amid rising tensionsSouth Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa, from front row left, China's President Xi Jinping, and Australia's Prime Minister ...
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