NGO statement on the WTO decision to retract their previously granted access to the Ministerial Conference on its opening day
Three days prior to the convening of the Ministerial Conference in Geneva to be held at the WTO premises on 12th June, NGOs were informed that their previously granted access on the first day was retracted due to “unexpected security-related reasons”. Even after repeated asking, these ‘reasons’ were never shared, much less explained or justified. After problematic experiences also at the last WTO ministerial in Argentina in 2017, civil society groups fear that such exclusions are becoming a permanent, and perhaps worsening, feature during this and coming Ministerial Conferences.
A civil society representative set to attend the Ministerial Conference is Richard Hill from Association for Proper Internet Governance (Switzerland):
“As a Swiss citizen, I am surprised, disappointed, and outraged that I will not be allowed to enter the WTO premises for the opening of the WTO Ministerial meeting on Sunday, even though I am a registered and accredited civil society representative to the meeting. This is particularly surprising for a meeting held in Switzerland, which has a long and robust tradition of consulting and listening to all concerned parties, in particular civil society.”
Genèva has hosted the WTO Ministerial Conference multiple times before but has never exercised such restrictions to the premises during those conferences. The Genèva based Ministerial Conference in 2009 saw a larger representation of NGOs present at the Ministerial Conference, attendees to that meeting can report. The 12th Ministerial Conference was moved from the host country Kazakhstan to a new planned meeting in Switzerland November 2021, due to COVID-19. For the planned meeting in November 2021 in Genèva, the WTO imposed so-called “floating badges” to restrict the number of attendees per organization due to local COVID-restrictions. Despite local COVID-restrictions now being removed, the WTO decided to uphold those restrictions.
Parts of the NGO sector did, however, face grave restrictions when gathering at the last, 11th, Ministerial Conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 2017. Then, many civil society organizations were not even given access to the country. One of the CSO representatives who was denied access in Buenos Aires, Sofía B. Scasserra (Instituto del Mundo del Trabajo, UNTREF, Argentina) is again facing restrictions to a WTO Ministerial Conference: “Four years ago, many in civil society were left out of the Buenos Aires Ministerial, showing how undemocratic it is and how it makes decisions behind the people's backs. Today we hear that civil society would not be let in on the first day, for reasons not explained to us. I thought it would be different here, but it is the same story repeating itself. We fear that the WTO is now normaliasing this process of excluding civil society from its processes, while businesses are embraced more and more by it. This is completely unacceptable, and goes against the interests of the people in whose name the WTO convenes.”
Olisias Gulthom, from the civil society organization Indonesia for Global Justice, sees the retraction of civil society’s access to the meeting on Sunday as a further move of shrinking policy space for certain groups:
“Tactics towards civil society organizations mirror the Director General’s Green Room talks and bullying towards many developing countries at MC12.”
This exclusion of civil society presence by the WTO is completely unacceptable.