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The Sixth WTO Ministerial Conference
Hong Kong, China, 13 to 18 December 2005.
Dhaka may use veto if LDCs denied duty-free market access
Unb, Dhaka
The Daily Star, 15 -12-2005
Bangladesh may use veto in the WTO Ministerial Conference
unless it gets duty-and quota-free market access to the
developed and developing countries, the main concern of the
country and other LDCs.
Commerce
Minister Altaf Hossain Chowdhury spoke of the possibility of
protest at a dialogue on the sidelines of the plenary session on
the second day of the sixth session of the 6-day WTO meet in
Hong Kong, a member of Bangladesh delegation told UNB over
telephone from Hong Kong.
Bangladesh
will use veto if the developed countries do not give duty and
quota-free market access to all least developed countries' (LDCs),
Chowdhury told the meeting.
Ambassador
of Zambia and the LDC coordinator in the WTO trade talks, Love
Mtesa, however, said the time is yet to come to say anything
about veto. "If the developed countries try to divide LDCs, it
will not be possible. The LDCs are all together. They swim
together; if drowned, it'll be together," Mtesa declared.
Trade
experts said veto in the past. When negotiation comes close to
an end, every country looks after the national interests instead
of the group interests, they observed.
At a
sideline meeting with Altaf Chowdhury earlier in the day,
Zambian Commerce Minister Dipak Patel, who is the chief
coordinator of the LDCs in the talks, said the LDCs would raise
the 'red flag' if they do not get free market access.
INDIA,
AUSTRALIA TURN LDC SUPPORTERS
Meanwhile, India and Australia have joined the EU, USA and
Brazil in backing the LDCs' demand for duty- and quota-free
market access of their products at the ongoing conference.
"Developed
countries and the developing countries in a position to do so
should provide duty-free and quota-free access without any
staging and on a secure and predictable basis," India told the
plenary session of the conference yesterday.
The LDCs'
demand was the dominant issue of discussion on the second day of
the six-day meet, according to a message received here. Brazil,
which is representing the interests of the developing country
group in the trade talks, reportedly supported the demand. So
did the EU and the USA.
The latest
text of the conference released by the WTO General Council
endorsed the main demands of the LDCs, but experts voiced
concern and uncertainty as the developed and the developing
countries were at loggerheads over the issues.
The demand
of the LDCs for duty and quota-free market access met with
strong support at an informal meeting on 'specific development'
held on the sidelines. Guyanese Foreign Trade and International
Cooperation Minister Clement Rohee, who chaired the meeting,
stressed the importance of such an access for the LDCs.
EC Trade
Commissioner Peter Mandelson also supported the demand at
another sideline meeting of the LDC group.
Besides
the EU, a number of developed countries including Australia,
Canada, Norway and Sweden have already provided duty-free market
access to the LDCs, Altaf Chowdhury informed the meeting.
He said,
"It's the legitimate claim of the LDCs that they must be
accorded this access without any delay or discrimination."
Chowdhury,
who leads an 18-member Bangladeshi delegation, also mentioned
that China has granted duty-free access for 83 and Korea for 139
tariff lines to Bangladesh.
He sought
the EU's support to the LDCs' concern of duty- and quota-free
market access with realistic and simplified rules of origin into
the markets of rich nations.
"The
market access is very crucial for a meaningful unification of
the LDCs with the multilateral trading system," he told
Mandelson and requested him to support the LDCs' demands in the
light of Livingstone Declaration, which the LDC ministers had
adopted at a pre-Hong Kong meeting.
The
Bangladesh delegation also drew attention of the EU trade
negotiator for the need of meaningful technical assistance.
Altaf
Chowdhury reiterated the LDC position at yet another sideline
meeting organised by the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD), a
leading independent think-tank of Bangladesh, in Hong Kong
yesterday.
The
Bangladesh delegation was engaged in trade negotiations in three
groups to follow up the progress of discussions on market access
of non-agricultural products from the LDCs to the developed and
developing countries, farm products and other issues.
Altaf
Chowdhury also met the heads of delegations and trade leaders,
who gathered in Hong Kong from across the world to attend the
sixth session of the WTO Ministerial Conference, on the
sidelines to exchange views on mutual interests.
He held
discussions with Commerce Minister of Turkey Kermad Tuzmen and
Sri Lankan Commerce Minister Joyraj Fernandos to examine the
prospects of bilateral trade. He had trade talks with the
British minister for international development, foreign and
commerce ministers of Japan, WTO director general and Afghan
trade minister. He also took up the possibility of exporting
less-skilled workers with UAE Finance and Planning Minister
Eshaikha Hubna Al Qasimi.
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