| EU-ACP trade negotiations: new threats for East AfricaEcoNews Africa
 PRESS RELEASE
 Nairobi, 14 January 2005
 As Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania are implementing the                      recently signed Customs Union Protocol, the European Union                     is undermining integration between the countries through                     trade negotiations which have seen the three countries                     split up in two different negotiating blocs”, said Jane                     Nalunga from Seatini, Uganda, at a conference in Nairobi on                     the current trade negotiations between the EU and ACP                     countries. At this very moment a series of negotiations on                     crucial issues, such as agriculture, industrial goods and                     services, are going on – negotiations which will open East                     African markets to a flood of European goods and services.  Forty civil society representatives from ten countries in                     Eastern and Southern Africa have gathered in Nairobi during                     two days to voice their concerns on the negotiations on the                     so called Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs).  “These agreements are Free Trade Areas being negotiated                     between some of the world’s richest countries and some of                     the poorest, where African countries will be facing huge                     government revenue losses through elimination of tariffs,                     increased unemployment following collapse of local                     industries and threatened livelihoods of millions of small                     scale farmers due to competition from increased European                     imports”, said Ashok Subron from Resistance and                     Alternatives, Mauritius.  The civil society representatives are concerned since the                     negotiations are threatening genuine regional integration                     efforts going on in the Eastern and Southern Africa region.  “These negotiations will lead to trade diversions rather                     than trade creation in our region and unfair competition                     from European goods, at a crucial time when the Eastern and                     Southern African countries - and particularly a country                     like Kenya - should be putting the emphasis on developing                     and promoting the regional markets instead”, said Peter                     Aoga from EcoNews Africa, Kenya.  “Ironically as European ministers are traveling all over                     Africa, as currently the UK Chancellor of the Exchequer                     Gordon Brown, promoting new initiatives for Africa like                     Tony Blair’s Commission, they have given their mandate to                     the EPAs negotiations, which many African ministers have                     expressed their worries with. The EU is rushing the EPAs                     process with extremely unrealistic time frames, using their                     divide and rule negotiating tactic to push through their                     own trade and investment agenda - and in this even going                     beyond what has been agreed at the World Trade Organisation (WTO)”, said Richard Kamidza from Seatini, Zimbabwe.
 
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