World | Africa Defiant African Leaders Reject EU Trade Deal Relations between continents sour over human rights, Mugabe By Wesley Oliver Posted Dec 10, 2007 4:03 AM CST Copied Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe, right, shares a word with Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir during a group photo at an EU Africa summit in Lisbon, Saturday Dec. 8, 2007. (AP Photo/Armando Franca) (Associated Press) European-African trade talks at a tense Lisbon summit collapsed in their final session yesterday. If a new agreement isn’t reached by year’s end, the European Union may levy higher tariffs on African exports, further exacerbating tensions between the continents. A new, controversial set of agreements would have dropped duty on most imports from Africa in exchange for granting Europe liberalized access to African markets. "No one will make us believe we don't have the right to protect our economic fabric," said the president of the African Union commission. Anti-poverty activists had been protesting the agreements, saying they would hurt poor African farmers and future development on the continent. Summit leaders talked trade but also traded barbs over human rights and controversial Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe, the Guardian reports. Read These Next CBS News boss pulls 60 Minutes segment critical of Trump policy. Kansas City Chiefs moving across state line. Camera records 'dirty eruption' at Yellowstone National Park. Feds strike another blow in war on wind turbines. Report an error