Bangladesh team leaves today for WTO Hong Kong ministerial
Unb, Dhaka
Bangladesh delegation for the WTO Ministerial Conference leaves
for Hong Kong today to join the crucial negotiations with
special focus on duty-free and quota-free market access of the
non-agricultural products from the least developed countries.
Commerce Minister Altaf Hossain Choudhury is leading an
around 20-member official delegation to the sixth session of the
ministerial December 13-18, being held after a lot of groundwork
to salvage the global trade regime from the Cancun collapse.
"Our main concern is to see where the negotiation on NAMA
goes," a senior official, one of the key players on Bangladesh
side at the world trade talks, told the news agency yesterday.
He said negotiations on the special and differential
treatment to the LDCs and services sector, including temporary
movement of natural persons, would also be the concern of
Bangladesh.
He, however, pointed out that the most recent ministerial
text drafted by the World Trade Organisation (WTO) on December 6
provided LDCs with more flexibility and options for the LDCs.
"Now the benefits for the LDCs would depend on and be clear
during the negotiation on how we could negotiate the factors of
flexibility," he said about the prospect of the ministerial
meet.
The draft text by the WTO observes that the members are far
from achieving full modalities, which it stated to be highly
troubling in the ministerial.
Its final remarks say: "It will take a major effort by all if
the objective of concluding the NAMA (non-agricultural market
access) negotiations by the end of 2006 is to be realised."
The official delegation comprises officials from the
Ministries of Commerce and Agriculture, the National Board of
Revenue (NBR), Bangladesh Tariff Commission, trade body leaders
from FBCCI, BGMEA, BTMA, DCCI and ICC-B, and experts from the
civil society.Besides, around 100 activists from NGOs and trade
unions from Bangladesh would join some 10,000 anti-globalisation
protesters to try to press home their demands. Some 300
ministers, 6,000 delegates, 3,000 journalists and 2,000 NGO
representatives are converging on the business hub. |