Revenues of Libya’s Ports Decline Due to Unrest

Revenues of Libya’s Ports Decline Due to Unrest
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Revenues of Libya’s Ports Decline Due to Unrest

Revenues of Libya’s Ports Decline Due to Unrest

Libya’s commercial seaports have been affected by the ongoing conflict in the country and their revenues have largely declined.

Like many other Libyan institutions and facilities, these ports have been divided between the east and the west, and their maintenance has been neglected. Not to mention, rumors have spread on ports located in the west being exploited to smuggle weapons and mercenaries from Turkey.

Head of Libyan Ports and Maritime Transport Authority (PMTA) in the interim government Hassan Goueli stressed that “the armed conflict has resulted in a dramatic decrease in maritime commercial traffic, exceeding 70 percent in some years.”

He told Asharq Al-Awsat that it is not over yet. “Annual maintenance has stopped along with strategic planning to develop and establish new ports.”

“Ports run by the interim government are nine among 15 all over Libya, including the commercial, oil and industrial,” he noted.

Head of the Libyan Ports Company Yazid Bouzrida highlighted the “significant damage caused by the conflict, particularly during the war on terror years in both Benghazi and Derna a few years ago.”

Bouzrida told Asharq Al-Awsat that there are five commercial ports in the country’s eastern region. These are Benghazi, Brega, Ras Lanuf, Tobruk and Derna.

That in Benghazi is a main port in the east and is considered the country’s second-largest port. It was one of the most affected facilities since its infrastructure, mechanisms, and equipment were 90% destructed during the period when the militias took over the city.

Smuggling arms through commercial ports has been taking place for years now, he noted.

“Before 2014, we were all working in the port and we were monitoring the militias’ attempt to hide the arms smuggling process through cargo containers,” Bouzrida explained, adding that these arms were later shipped by cars to different sites in the city.

However, as the army advanced in the battle to liberate Benghazi, weapons were being smuggled through fishing vessels on the seashore, he stressed.



China Hits Back at US and Will Raise Tariffs on American Goods from 84% to 125%

An electronic board shows Shanghai and Shenzhen stock indices as people walk on a pedestrian bridge at the Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China April 11, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura
An electronic board shows Shanghai and Shenzhen stock indices as people walk on a pedestrian bridge at the Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China April 11, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura
TT
20

China Hits Back at US and Will Raise Tariffs on American Goods from 84% to 125%

An electronic board shows Shanghai and Shenzhen stock indices as people walk on a pedestrian bridge at the Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China April 11, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura
An electronic board shows Shanghai and Shenzhen stock indices as people walk on a pedestrian bridge at the Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China April 11, 2025. REUTERS/Go Nakamura

China announced Friday that it will raise tariffs on US goods from 84% to 125% — the latest salvo in an escalating trade war between the world's two largest economies that has rattled markets and raised fears of a global slowdown.

While US President Donald Trump paused import taxes this week for other countries, he raised tariffs on China and they now total 145%. China has denounced the policy as “economic bullying" and promised countermeasures. The new tariffs begin Saturday.

Washington's repeated raising of tariffs “will become a joke in the history of the world economy,” a Chinese Finance Ministry spokesman said in a statement announcing the new tariffs. “However, if the US insists on continuing to substantially infringe on China’s interests, China will resolutely counter and fight to the end.”

China’s Commerce Ministry said it would file another lawsuit with the World Trade Organization against the US tariffs.

“There are no winners in a tariff war,” Chinese leader Xi Jinping said during a meeting with the Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, according to a readout from state broadcaster CCTV. “For more than 70 years, China has always relied on itself ... and hard work for development, never relying on favors from anyone, and not fearing any unreasonable suppression.”

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Friday said China stands firm against Trump’s tariffs not only to defend its own rights and interests but also to “safeguard the common interests of the international community to ensure that humanity is not dragged back into a jungle world where might makes right.”

Wang made the remarks when he met Rafael Mariano Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency in Beijing. Wang said China will “work together with other countries to jointly resist all retrogressive actions in the world.”

Trump's on-again, off-again measures have caused alarm in stock and bond markets and led some to warn that the US could be headed for a recession. There was some relief when Trump paused the tariffs for most countries — but concerns remain since the US and China are the world's No. 1 and No. 2 economies, respectively.

“The risk that this escalating trade war tips the world into a recession is rising as the two largest and most powerful countries in the world continue to punch back with higher and higher tariffs,” Jennifer Lee, a senior economist at BMO Capital markets, wrote Friday. “No one truly knows when this will end.”

Chinese tariffs will affect goods like soybeans, aircrafts and their parts and drugs — all among the country's major imports from the US Beijing, meanwhile, suspended sorghum, poultry and bonemeal imports from some American companies last week, and put more export controls on rare earth minerals, critical for various technologies.

The United States' top imports from China, meanwhile, include electronics, like computers and cell phones, industrial equipment and toys — and consumers and businesses are likely to see prices rise on those products, with tariffs now at 145%.

Trump announced on Wednesday that China would face 125% tariffs, but he did not include a 20% tariff on China tied to its role in fentanyl production.

White House officials hope the import taxes will create more manufacturing jobs by bringing production back to the United States — a politically risky trade-off that could take years to materialize, if at all.