Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,150,889 members, 7,810,423 topics. Date: Saturday, 27 April 2024 at 08:43 AM

Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU - Fashion/Clothing Market - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Entertainment / Fashion / Fashion/Clothing Market / Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU (16998 Views)

Cloth Face Mask 100% Cotton With Filter / Second Hand Shoes For Sale / Industral Machine For Leather And Cloth For Sale. Low Price!!! (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (Reply) (Go Down)

Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by PrincessDiana: 12:27pm On Mar 26
Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban by the EU

Kenya’s second-hand cloth dealers are lobbying against a proposal by France, Denmark, and Sweden to ban the export of second-hand clothes from the European Union (EU).

According to Reuters, the second-hand cloth trade in Kenya employs about 2 million people and provides their livelihood hence the protest against the proposed ban by the EU.

According to UN trade data, the EU exported 1.4 million tonnes of used textiles in 2022, more than twice what they exported in 2000. The three countries argued that much of these exported textiles when they cannot be resold end up as waste in their host countries adding to pollution.

They also propose that the EU apply the Basel Convention to used clothes, banning exports of hazardous textile waste and requiring informed consent to be obtained before importing textile waste.

[b]“The export of textile waste from the EU to developing countries causes significant environmental, social, and health problems. The EU has to put an end to this practice,” Denmark’s deputy permanent representative to the EU, Soren Jacobsen, told an Environment Council meeting in Brussels.
The aim of including used clothes in the Basel Convention would be to reduce or even end exports of used clothes from the EU, and instead promote the development of textile recycling within the bloc, Cyril Piquemal, France’s deputy permanent representative to the EU, said.
In Response to these Proposals, Teresia Wairimu Njenga, chair of the Mitumba Consortiumz Association of Kenya, which represents sellers of second-hand clothes told Reuters that the importation of used clothes from European countries sustained livelihood for millions of Kenyans and also generated tax revenue for the country.
Njenga denied that second-hand cloth imports contain a large batch of unusable items that end up as trash adding to pollution.[/b]

“Nobody is giving us trash by force — what we are buying is good quality clothes, and if a supplier wants to sell us trash, we would be happy to refuse their consignment,” she said.
Njenga has paid a couple of diplomatic visits to people who can influence and overturn the proposed ban on the exportation of second-hand clothing by the EU.

She has met officials in Lithuania, Finland, and Sweden to argue against the proposal.

She also planned to meet officials from the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Trade and the Directorate-General for the Environment to further push for an overturn of the proposed ban.


What To Know
Kenya imported 177,386 tonnes of used clothing in 2022, a 76% increase from the amount imported in 2013, according to U.N. trade data.
African countries including Ghana, Senegal, Nigeria, and South Africa are also significant importers of used clothing, the data shows.
Around 1%-2% of each imported bale of used clothes ends up as waste, according to research commissioned by the association and published in September last year, based on 120 interviews with importers of second-hand clothes in Nairobi.
https://nairametrics.com/2024/03/26/kenyas-second-hand-cloth-dealers-kick-against-proposed-ban-by-the-eu/?amp=1

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by amiibaby(f): 6:04am On Mar 27
Haba why mess with someone means of livelihood just cos u have the power. Their gov should ensure all waste are properly disposed of instead of outright ban. That is inhumane

11 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Dshocker(m): 6:05am On Mar 27
Africa the dumping ground...

Meanwhile, most of the raw materials used for manufacturing in Europe, America and Asia, all comes from Africa.

103 Likes 9 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by vibbb: 6:05am On Mar 27
Na today ? How many production factories do the like of Adidas, Nike and Co have in Africa ?
They should leave them alone, if they want to be
banning exports of hazardous textile waste and requiring informed consent to be obtained before importing textile waste - that's a welcome development.

5 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by RushManni: 6:06am On Mar 27
Things are happening

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by omoredia: 6:07am On Mar 27
One man's food is another man's poison oo

2 Likes

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Austindark(m): 6:07am On Mar 27
Na wa for Africa. We are always thinking about the immediate satisfaction. This was why we sold our fellow Africans as slaves just to have a taste of chocolates.
A rational individual will leverage on this and develop their homebase textile industry. We have enough cotton in the continent.
Later we will blame the Europeans for our predicaments after turning our country into a refuse dump.

59 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by omoredia: 6:07am On Mar 27
One man's food is another man's poison ooo
Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by RecentHistory: 6:08am On Mar 27
If I post the history of second hand clothes in Nigeria here, some people will cry.

5 Likes

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by ManishSmith(m): 6:09am On Mar 27
But you did not think about environmental damage when you were drilling oil wells, digging up holes and trench looking for precious stone, after indoctrinating Africa that we can’t do anything and must depend you, you want to stop what you started? Let see how it unfolds

14 Likes

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Dadadididacontr: 6:10am On Mar 27
Used cloth importation causes damages to textile industries and its unhealthy. EU should ban it, the worst would be using ankara to sow pant.

35 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Tabletuner(m): 6:10am On Mar 27
I thought African countries say they don't need the EU, so why cry over used clothes?

17 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by derecho(m): 6:11am On Mar 27
Imagine..EU didn't ban the LGBTQ trash they are sending to Africa, na second hand clothing wey una no need be una headache

13 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by SpatialKing(m): 6:12am On Mar 27
Hmmm
Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by RandomFellow: 6:13am On Mar 27
People say they want to start recycling their trash, some other people come de beg them to please send the trash to them. Telling us how the 2nd hand clothes employ millions... Beggars!!! Goand manufacture your own clothes, and sell to your citizens

18 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Energist: 6:14am On Mar 27
Might be a blessing in disguise. It will boost the local textile industry

10 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Lumig: 6:14am On Mar 27
Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Sunnycliff(m): 6:14am On Mar 27
Imagine say u de your country de wan protest against the decision of another country, hahahaha

Africa, Africa!! When we go grow up to meet our basic needs of food, shelter and clothing?

25 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Watinhapen(m): 6:14am On Mar 27
They want to ban aloko?? What will Nigerians be wearing??

1 Like

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Seequadry(m): 6:18am On Mar 27
Nigerian olosho's didn't know what's about to hit them

2 Likes

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by ArewaNightmare: 6:20am On Mar 27
grin who swear for my darling Africa sef

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Erons2000(f): 6:20am On Mar 27
Funny enough dey have thrift stores over dere,dem no ban am,Na Africa dem wan Shame.....ok

1 Like

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Mindlog: 6:26am On Mar 27
Mitumba (Okrika) is huge business in Kenya and other East African Countries who get them through Kenya but the painful thing is that, this same Kenya is where some big global fashion brands like H&M, Cherokee, Calvin Klein etc outsource the production of their clothing items at various Kenya’s export processing zones using thousands of Kenyan tailors and have them exported to Europe and North America.

After Oyibo wear am finish, it is imported back to Africa as second-hand clothing....really sad.

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by FutureFocus: 6:28am On Mar 27
amiibaby:
Haba why mess with someone means of livelihood just cos u have the power. Their gov should ensure all waste are properly disposed of instead of outright ban. That is inhumane
Not the issue Ma, just imagine a booming textile industry in Kenya that will provide employment for same people , produce new cloth for people to wear and improve Kenya Economy, those are the things that killed the Nigeria Textile industry, first it cultural manipulation to promote their own culture, very deep. It will take me many hours to lecture you about this

It killed textile industry
Those second hands cloth have heath risk
Promoting European dressing in Africa
Eliminating promotion of our own local attire

A booming local textile industry will employ, farmers to produce cotton, employ labor, employ engineers, my dear it’s very deep.
Do you know the worth of Nigeria textile industry market?

We never tap from our potential in this country
It’s sad


Note - I sell nice gadgets , professional headsets for remote workers and lots more

8 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Noniblaq(m): 6:29am On Mar 27
Families about to go hungry. Do you know that with only fifteen Kay, you can get three quality vintage shirts. See my thread for update
Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Inspirer1: 6:33am On Mar 27
Austindark:
Na wa for Africa. We are always thinking about the immediate satisfaction. This was why we sold our fellow Africans as slaves just to have a taste of chocolates.
A rational individual will leverage on this and develop their homebase textile industry. We have enough cotton in the continent.
Later we will blame the Europeans for our predicaments after turning their country into a refuse dump.
The bold is exactly what came to my mind about Nigeria as big as we are because it will affect us too.

We have Ministry of trade, commerce and industry, but we have not heard about them TRULY looking and working on reviving the textile industry that will create millions of jobs directly and indirectly, and as well save forex for the country.

I wish government can quickly look into this before people start using leaves as clothes.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Sonnobax15(m): 6:34am On Mar 27
grin
So Africans really love the fact that their lands are being used as dumping sites by these Europeanps?.......

Na wa.....But come to think of it,with the way these already made clothes don dey very expensive now,e be like say na to carry my touch face Okrika and gbogbo now shocked. Cuz how can I buy a jean for 40k? Untop this my tiny waist angry. No na..
Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Peterpaul96: 6:34am On Mar 27
H
Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by CodeTemplar: 6:42am On Mar 27
amiibaby:
Haba why mess with someone means of livelihood just cos u have the power. Their gov should ensure all waste are properly disposed of instead of outright ban. That is inhumane
livelihood you say. If they go into cotton farming and textile making, will that not be a more dignified job that creates more value for us all? Look at it in a bigger way that covers long term investments.
Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by datola: 6:44am On Mar 27
Africa! The oyinbos are trying to help you and you are crying yen yen.

Do you know the huge positive impacts this can have on local textile industry

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Kenya’s Second-Hand Cloth Dealers Kick Against Proposed Ban By The EU by Okpokpo09: 6:44am On Mar 27
Tinubu with him bad luck everytime

(1) (2) (3) (Reply)

Is There Any Fashion School In Nigeria? / Wholesale/Retail Alert!!! / Affordable Woven Clothing Labels From N21000

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 34
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.