Accord de Cotonou
Document soutenu par l'URFIG
Oxfam says
EPA negotiations will not promote development
(GNA, 5 September 2004)
Accra, Sept. 5,
GNA - Oxfam, a development-oriented NGO said on Saturday that it was opposed to
the current form of negotiations on the Economic Partnership Agreements between
the European Union and ECOWAS countries because it would not promote sustainable
development and poverty reduction.
"While we believe that closer economic relationship between the EU and the
developing countries could lead to sustainable development and poverty reduction,
the blueprint presented by the EU will do nothing to further these goals,"
Mr Sam Salifu Danse, Country Programme Manager, Oxfam told Journalists in Accra.
Mr Danse said the EU blueprint, instead of presenting a strong development
component to level the playing field for countries in the sub-region; the EU had
failed to offer any increase in current overall levels of financial assistance.
In addition, the EU was requiring member countries of ECOWAS to open up to EU
goods and investors at a time ECOWAS countries were not in position to compete
effectively, a move that could be devastating to the economies and livelihood of
its people.
Mr Danse said besides these negative issues, the EPA negotiations would weaken
the regional integration process, which is important for the long-term
development of the sub-region.
"Without increased economies of scale and regional economic integration,
there is little possibility of fair and equitable economic exchanges with the
EU," he said.
" There is no evidence that the simultaneous effort to open small and weak
economies to big ones, while promoting regional integration is possible,"
he added.
Mr Danse said Oxfam would like to see a much stronger and differential treatment,
which would involve a much lesser degree of reciprocity than what the EU is
currently demanding, especially in the area of protection of sensitive
industries and agricultural sectors from unfair competition from EU products.
There must also be the inclusion of a substantial development component with
expanded financial assistance and compensatory programmes and mechanisms to
address adjustment costs as well as a respect for African led integration
process as a prerequisite for pro-poor and equitable economic partnership.
"Regional markets should be consolidated before ECOWAS market is subject to
further opening up to the EU," Danse said. On Education, Oxfam urged donors
to close the multi-billion dollar shortfall in education financing to enable
more children to attend school in line with the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
There must also be deeper and broader debt relief to enable poor countries to
reach the MDGs.
"Donors in the West and the EU have a moral responsibility to live up to
their promises on trade, agriculture and education, if they are truly committed
to the ideals of MDGs.
Two British opposition Members of Parliament, John Bercow and Tom Brake, who
interacted with poor rice, cotton and tomatoes farmers in the North as well as
visited small-scale Cocoa farmers in Ashanti, promised to bring Ghana's concerns
about the unfair trade and agriculture regimes to the attention of the British
government.