Britain’s chicken industry is only a tenth the size of America’s

Aziz Sulliman has a bone to pick with Donald Trump. Deep in the remote, rugged mining country of South Africa’s Northern Cape province, Sulliman’s chicken farm has fallen on hard times.

The 46-year-old slaughters about 10,000 birds every few weeks, but that figure has fallen sharply over a couple of years thanks to a wave of cheap chicken imports pouring into the country — particularly from America.

“I can produce a chicken very cheaply, but I can’t compete with the Americans,” said Sulliman. “My business has been cut in half, and I had to close the two retail outlets I was running. It’s cut-throat.”

The two countries have squabbled over poultry for years, but Trump’s “America First” trade war has breathed new life into the