Please
note that because of a lack of time we are collecting
the
European and international signatories at the same
time.
all
the best
Ronnie
Hall
Friends of the Earth (England, Wales and N Ireland)
--------------------
****Call
for the European Union to withdraw its proposal for a new
and
comprehensive round of trade negotiations in the World
Trade
Organisation****
Despite
continued and vocal opposition from governments and
people
around the world, the European Union (EU) continues to call
for the
establishment of a new and comprehensive round of trade
negotiations at
the next World Trade Organisation's (WTO) Ministerial in
Qatar, in
November 2001.
The
EU's proposal remains virtually unchanged since the WTO's
last
Ministerial in Seattle, in December 2000, when it
contributed to the
collapse of negotiations due to unprecedented opposition
from developing
countries
and civil society groups. The same tensions could cause
the
collapse of the Qatar Ministerial.
The
EU intends to bring a broad range of 'new issues' -
including
investment, competition and government procurement - to the
negotiating
table. Many developing countries are opposed to this
position, on the
grounds that - far from being a 'development round', as
suggested by
Clare Short, the UK's Secretary of State for International
Development -
this agenda ignores their concerns and threatens to
undermine their
development needs (1).
During
the Seattle Ministerial, nearly 1500 citizens' groups and
social
movements from 89 developed countries also opposed the EU's
new round
agenda on the basis that it would have severe social,
economic and
environmental impacts (2). These concerns remain but appear
to have been
ignored (3).
The
undersigned support a multilateral trading system that
is
democratic, equitable, sustainable and in harmony with the
requirements
of local and regional economies. However, the WTO, with the
active
support of the EU and the WTO Secretariat - notably EU
Trade
Commissioner Pascal Lamy and WTO Director General Mike Moore
- are
promoting a different agenda, that of corporate
globalisation. Instead
of recognising and addressing the social, economic and
environmental
problems associated with existing WTO agreements, they are
pushing for
further trade liberalisation in the areas of servcies,
investment,
competition and government procurement, largely at the
behest of and in
the interest of transnational corporations based primarily
in the EU and
the United States.
The
EU should withdraw its proposal for a new and comprehensive
round. A
new round is not inevitable. Furthermore, mandated
negotiations already
underway (concerning intellectual property rights and the
further
liberalisation of trade in services and agriculture) are
already
sufficiently controversial, having the potential to have
severe negative
impacts on people, the environment and local economies in
both the North
and the South.
Instead,
the European Union should take the lead in calling for
fundamental change to the world's trading system, in line
with its own
sustainable development and human rights objectives. The EU
should start
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