URFIG-supported Document about WTO
THE DESASTROUS LATEST DRAFT
OF WTO
MINISTERIAL DECLARATION
(30 October 2001)
LATEST DRAFT OF WTO MINISTERIAL SPELLS DISASTER FOR LEAST DEVELOPED AND
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, SLAPS GLOBAL CITIZENS MOVEMENT
A BLATANT LACK OF DEMOCRATIC PROCESS PREVAILS AT THE WTO AS A
"COMPLETE" TEXT IS STEAMROLLED INTO A PROPOSED LAUNCH OF NEGOTIATIONS
DESPITE CONTINUED PROTESTS BY MAJORITY OF WTO MEMBERS AND CIVIL SOCIETY
A new draft of a Ministerial Declaration for the WTO's upcoming Doha summit released this weekend was repudiated strongly by civil society groups from
around the world today. The latest attempt to prepare a document for the
WTO meeting, which is planned for November 9-13 in Doha, Qatar, was met with
outrage by civil society and disbelief and frustration by developing countries
and Least Developed Countries (LDCs) because the tone and content of the new
text presumes a consensus on a future WTO agenda which does not exist.
Non-governmental organizations from around the world called on their governments
to denounce this text as illegitimate and to oppose it being moved forward for
use at the WTO Doha Ministerial.
This text follows on a previous draft declaration which was widely rejected by
developing country WTO delegates. The new text continues to exclude the
developing countries' key demands but includes many proposals to which these WTO
Members adamantly object. Last month's consultations at the WTO have resulted in
a further breach of due process by steamrolling ahead with a version that lacks
any options or "brackets" around a text that is still heavily
disputed. This creates a serious breach of democratic process whereby months of
repeated interventions by the majority of the WTO's own membership have been
dismissed.
In contrast to this text, in reality there remain deep disagreements among WTO
Member nations about the organization's future agenda. Since before the Seattle
WTO Ministerial, most developing country WTO Members have demanded that the
existing flaws and imbalances in the WTO be addressed, but the U.S. has led
unbending opposition to this "implementation agenda." The European
Union push for expansion of WTO disciplines into new issues, such as investment,
competition policy and procurement, has been resoundingly rejected by developing
nations. There remain significant divisions around the agriculture negotiations
where developing countries are pushing for development concerns such as food
security and rural development while the US and EU continue to protect their
markets through export subsidies and credits. Many WTO Members demand new
negotiations on anti-dumping policy but the U.S. has insisted this issues be off
the table, although that issue - along with investment, competition, procurement
and more - are included as topics for future negotiations in this latest text.
Meanwhile, the list of provisions that developing nation WTO Members have
identified for urgent review and repair before any WTO negotiations on new
issues are actually more watered down in the latest text. Under existing WTO
agreements, the poorest countries' share of world trade has declined and many
poor countries' development and health policies have come under attack as
violations of WTO rules. The new draft responds to these demands by effectively
restating the U.S. hardline position that none of these issues will be addressed
without further concessions by the developing countries.
The new draft text is also viewed as a slap in the face to the global civil
society movement of peasant farmers and fisherfolk, workers, environmentalists
who have worked together internationally for years before the Seattle
Ministerial and since. Many civil society and labor groups have unified around
an effort, dubbed the "Our World Is Not for Sale: WTO-Shrink or Sink"
campaign, which calls for transformational change to the WTO. The demands of
these groups, which include an array of mass movements and organizations from
the developing and developed world and global labor and farmer organizations,
were also uniformly dismissed in the latest draft Ministerial text.
The recalcitrance of the WTO Secretariat and the few rich nations who have
greatest pull on the WTO agenda to address the developing country and civil
society demands is pushing the Doha Ministerial towards an outcome that may
either spell disaster for the majority of its members or another Seattle: an
outright rejection of an invalid text.
Signers of statement:
* Alliance for Democracy, U.S.
Contact Ruth Caplan (Washington DC): 202-244-0561
* Arab NGO Network for Development, Lebanon
Contact Ziad Abdel Samad (Beirut): +961-1-319-366
* ECOROPA, France
Contact Agnes Bertrand (Sauve): 33-4-66-77-0704
* Focus on the Global South, Thailand
Contact Aileen Kwa (Geneva): 41-22-791-8050
* Friends of the Earth - International
Contact: Alexandra Wandel (Brussels) +32-2-542-0185 or Ronnie Hall (London)
+44-1243-602-756
* Global Exchange, U.S.
Contact: Juliette Beck (San Francisco): 415-255-7296 x 254
* IBON Foundation, Philippines
Contact Tony Tujan (Manila): +632-714-1580
* Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, U.S.
Contact Shefali Sharma (Geneva) +41-22-789-0724 and Sophia Murphy
(Minneapolis) +612-870-3454
* Institute for the Re-localization of the Economy, France
Contact Agnes Bertrand (Sauve): 33-4-66-77-0704
* Public Citizen, U.S.
Contact Margrete Strand (Washington DC): +202-454-5106
* Via Campesina, International
Contact Nico Verhagen (Brussels): +32-2-343-8444
* URFIG (Unité de Recherche, de Formation et d'Information sur la
Globalisation)
Contact Raoul Marc Jennar (Brussels) : 32 478 913 812