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The Sixth WTO Ministerial Conference
Hong Kong, China, 13 to 18 December 2005.
Civil Society Forum seeks market access for LDCs
The Daily Star
04-10-2005
A three-day International
Civil Society Forum 2005-- For Advancing LDC Interests in the
Sixth WTO Ministerial kicked off in the capital yesterday with
a call for providing market access to the LDC products in the
developed and developing countries.
"There remains much to be done to reverse the continued
marginalisation of the least developed countries (LDCs). Our
hopes and aspirations have been shattered by a sense of frustration
and disappointment," Commerce Minister Altaf Hossain Choudhury
said as chief guest at the inaugural session of the forum.
Around 50 representatives
from 26 countries are participating in the forum organised by
the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) at Sheraton Hotel.
Pascal Lamy, director general (DG) of the World Trade Organisation
(WTO), Dr Supachai Panitchpakti, secretary general of UNCTAD
and immediate past DG of the WTO were supposed to attend the
forum but they could not due other preoccupations. Messages
from them were however read out at the inaugural session.
Ambassador Love Mtesa,
Zambia's permanent representative at the WTO, read out a message
from Zambian Trade Minister Dipak Patel, also spokesperson of
the LDC at the WTO.
Altaf said the facilities
offered by the developed countries under preferential tariff
margin are often nullified by the application of non-tariff
barriers (NTBs). The NTBs faced by the LDCs should be addressed
separately, and on a priority basis, he said. "Exports
from LDCs are so insignificant that we fail to understand the
difficulties of providing such market access to us."
The commerce minister
mentioned that the LDCs are predominantly agricultural countries,
yet they account for an insignificant fraction of agriculture
trade. The LDC products should be exempted from anti-dumping,
countervailing and safeguard measures, he thought.
In his message, Pascal
Lamy said he would pay special attention to the needs of the
LDCs. He considers it his duty to rebalance the system by facilitating
and promoting the interests of small delegations.
"We cannot allow
the Hong Kong conference to represent a 'standstill', or worse
to bring us backwards. It is our last chance to move this round
to a successful conclusion by the end of 2006," he observed.
The negotiating process must be all-inclusive and transparent,
Lamy said.
He would ensure an
early circulation of the draft Ministerial Declaration to allow
enough time for small delegations to comment. He would create
ample opportunity for the LDCs to comment and be part of the
process, the DG of the WTO added.
Supachai Panitchpakti
in his message said civil society has an important responsibility
in its advocacy role about the marginalisation of the LDCs in
the global economic system.
More important perhaps is ensuring the active participation
of the LDCs in the negotiations at all stages, he said. There
is no substitute for this in articulating and defending one's
interests."But we also need to look beyond trade negotiations
and improve the productive capacity in Least Developed Countries,"
said the UNCTAD secretary general's message, read out by Toufiq
Ali, Bangladesh's permanent representative at the WTO.
Mahbubur Rahman,
chairman of the National Advisory Committee of the LDC Forum
2005, said trade cannot be free unless it is fair. In his introductory
speech, Debapriya Bhattacharya, executive director of the CPD,
said the road to the Hong Kong Ministerial promises to be both
slippery and bumpy.
LDCs are not a black hole, as some would like to project them,
he said.
"What we need
is support of the global institutions such as the WTO to help
us actualise the potentials about which we are aware, potentials
which we are capable of realising."
The Hong Kong Ministerial
is not the end of the Doha Round, rather it is a mid-term stock
taking exercise where the primary task is to agree on the modalities
and framework issues of the on-going negotiations, Debapriya
noted.
He mentioned that
the outcome of the first LDC forum on WTO in Dhaka was accorded
due recognition at the time of drafting the Dhaka Declaration
of the LDC trade ministers, and subsequently played a guiding
role in coalescing citizen's support in favour of the collective
position of the LDCs in the WTO.
Encouraged and inspired
by the success of the first LDC forum on WTO, the CPD decided
to convene the second forum, Debapriya added.
Aftab Alam Khan from
Action Aid International of Pakistan said there is much uncertainty
about the Hong Kong Ministerial with no clear roadmap for the
meet to be held in December. "We fear the wave of divide
and rule."
Dr Floor Smakman
of the EU-LDC Network in the Netherlands said signs of the Hong
Kong meet are not altogether positive.
The inaugural
session was also addressed by Cheikh Tidiane Dieye of Enda Tiers
Monde of Senegal, Ricardo Melendez-Ortiz, executive director
of International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development
of Switzerland, Anil Prabhakar Tambay, country representative
of Oxfam GB of Bangladesh, Pradeep S Mehta, chairman of Advisory
Board of South Asia Watch on Trade, Economics and Environmentof
Nepal and Nathan Irumba, adviser, Southern and Eastern African
Trade Information and Negotiations Institute of Uganda.
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