| more updates... Protesters march on Cancun  Mark Tran and agenciesWednesday September 10, 2003
  Amnesty International, the human rights organisation, today                     urged the Mexican government to ensure the right of peaceful                     demonstration as police stepped up security for the opening                     day of the trade summit inCancun.
 As police set up chain-link barricades and warships patrolled                     off Cancun's beaches, Amnesty sent letters to President Vicente                     Fox Quesada and the governor of the state of Quintana Roo,                     Lic Hendricks Diaz, callingon the authorities to ensure that individual standards on                     the use of force and firearms by law enforcement were fully                     respected.
 Some 4,700 delegates from the World Trade Organisation's                     146 member nations were meeting in the holiday resort of Cancun                     for five days to try to break the deadlock in the current                     round of trade liberalisation negotiations as rich and poor                     nations face off over agricultural subsidies and foreign investment                     and competition rules. The meeting poses a big security headache for the authorities                     as the event has attracted thousands of protesters who were                     preparing to march down the narrow, hotel-lined peninsula                     later today. Led by farmers from around the world, they planned                     to urge WTO members to ensure that any agreement protect their                     livelihood.  Police have steadily increased security throughout Cancun                     and two naval ships were stationed offshore. Protesters have                     been a force at every major WTO meeting since 1999, when violent                     street protestsdisrupted a gathering in Seattle.
 Yesterday, some 1,000 anarchists and leftists marched through                     downtown Cancun, banging drums and chanting anti-WTO slogans.                     They were forced back before reaching the meeting site. In the most militant statement on Cancun, the Zapatista rebel                     leader, Subcomandante Marcos, urged protesters to shut down                     the meeting. "This is a war," Marcos said in a taped                     message to protesters. "Let's hope that ... the train                     of death driven by the WTO will finally be derailed in Cancun."  Supachai Panitchpakdi, the WTO director-general, has argued                     that a successful conclusion of the current trade talks was                     a key to reviving the world economy. "Failure is not                     an option," he said. "It would send a very damaging                     signal around the world about prospects for economic recovery                     and would result in more hardship for workers around the globe,                     particularly in poorer countries."  But the prospects for agreement, particularly on agriculture,                     look grim. As expected the absence of agreement on agriculture                     could be a deal-breaker at Cancun. Instead of rolling over                     as in previous trade negotiations, the developing countries                     are sticking to their demand that rich countries start scrapping                     their huge agricultural subsidies.  Four west African cotton producers have demanded an end to                     cotton subsidies, especially from the US, that they say are                     wrecking the lives of millions of farmers. A larger group                     of 21 developing countries have formed a united front to demand                     the elimination of all farm subsidies - something the US and                     the EU have said is politically impossible. "The prospects of us in Cancun dealing with this extremely                     big and complex agenda are difficult," said South Africa's                     trade minister, Alec Erwin. "Butcertainly, if you don't make progress in agriculture, the                     G21 grouping of countries have indicated there's no merit,                     there's no justification, there's no
 validity in attempting to make progress on other matters."
 The UK shadow international development secretary, Caroline                     Spelman, agreed that it was time for Europe and America to                     cut farm subsidies to help alleviate world poverty as part                     of the campaign againstterrorism.
 "This round was actually launched two months after 9/11,                     when the whole world had woken up to the fact that if we allow                     people to suffer in abject poverty, it can create a breeding                     ground for terrorism," she told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.                     Cancun is supposed to be a crucial step towards a new global                     trade deal by January 2005. But little has been accomplishedsince the trade talks were launched in Doha, Qatar, in November                     2001. Doha marked the first time that developing country interests                     were placed at the centre of multilateral trade negotiations.
 A World Bank report released earlier this month said that                     a trade deal that addressed the concerns of developing nations                     could spur global growth and reduce poverty by as much as                     144 million people by 2015, Nicholas Stern, World Bank chief                     economist, put the onus on the rich countries to take the                     lead in negotiating a fair outcome to the Cancun negotiations.  "They are the dominant players and account for two-thirds                     of the global market," Mr Stern said. "They could                     show leadership by reducing agriculturalprotection, cutting high tariffs, and ensuring that the poorest                     countries have access to affordable medicines on the same                     terms as bigger developing countries."
 The World Bank report, Global Economic Prospects 2004, also                     noted that developing countries, especially the more dynamic                     ones, could contribute to a deal by agreeing to undertake                     trade liberalisation measuresthat would help boost global trade, and that were in their                     own interests as well.
 
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