| Friends of the Earth EuropePress release
 3 July 2003
  FROM PALERMO TO CANCUN: EU TRADE MINISTERS ASKED                     TO STOP WTO EXPANSION  (Brussels) At the eve of the EU Trade Ministers’ meeting                     in Palermo (1) to discuss the Cancun WTO Ministerial, civil                     society groups from across Europe are taking action to voice                     their dissent with the EU’s position. Today and tomorrow                     ministers will be sent off to Palermo and confronted with                     actions in front of trade ministries, parliaments and other                     relevant buildings in Amsterdam, Berlin, Helsinki, London,                     Rome, Stockholm, and Vienna (2). Additional actions are planned                     in Palermo for the weekend (3). In Palermo, the European Union                     is supposed to decide on its position for the next WTO Ministerial                     that will take place in Cancun, Mexico, from 10 to 14 September.  Notwithstanding broad opposition from the majority of developing                     countries and European civil society groups, the EU strongly                     advocates expanding the WTO agenda, in particular with regard                     to the start of formal WTO negotiations on a multilateral                     investment agreement, competition policy, transparency in                     government procurement and trade facilitation (“Singapore                     Issues”). The EU also presses for further liberalisation                     in trade of essential services, including water. On the table                     in Palermo are also controversial global agriculture trade                     talks.  A 'European Civil Society Call for the Palermo Ministerial:                     Withdraw EU Demands for the Expansion of the WTO in Cancun’                     is presented to trade ministers today and tomorrow in capitals                     and will be handed over by a group of NGOs in Palermo itself                     (4). In the statement around 100 groups, including Attac,                     FoEE, CEO, Oxfam International and CPE, the European farmer's                     association call on ministers to                      halt the push for an expanded WTO agenda promote an agenda to review and radically reform existing                       trade rules stop engaging in misleading trade-off strategies on agriculture                       vs Singapore issue. The EU must reduce subsidised dumping                       and move towards more sustainable agriculture without extracting                       further concessions from developing countries in return. Respond to the concerns of EU citizens and to the demands                       of poverty reduction and sustainable development. Urgently review the mandate of EU Commissioner Lamy.  Activities are organised in the framework of the Seattle                     to Brussels Network (5). The network argues that the current                     EU position favours big corporate interests to the detriment                     of promoting poverty reduction and sustainable development,                     and the right of governments to regulate and diversify their                     economies.  Contact:Alexandra Wandel, FoEE, +49 172-748 39 53 (m), from 5-8 July                     in Palermo
 For national contacts, see list below (1)
 Notes:(1) See http://www.ueitalia2003.it/
  (2) The following activities will take place:  * AMSTERDAM: 4 July: Launch of info brief on the EC's corporate agenda                     on WTO-Investment by Corporate Europe Observatory and InvestmentWatch.                     Available from both www.investmentwatch.org                     and www.corporateeurope.org,
 contact: Olivier Hoedeman, tel: +31-20-612-7023
 e-mail: steven@corporateeurope.org
 Additional contact for Dutch media: Anne van Schaik, Milieudefensie/FoE                     Netherlands: +31-20- 5507300
  * BERLIN3 July: Action by Trade Justice Movement, Germany in front                     of Bundestag,
 contact TJM, Antje Schultheiss, tel: +49-174 / 39 52 942 and                     Peter Fuchs, 0172 9095505, email: info@gerechtigkeit-jetzt.de
 4 July: Action in front of the ministry of economic affairs                     (BMWA), 8.30 a.m.organised by a group of independent activists,
 contact Paul Buntzel, 0178-543 90 49 (m), Pia Eberhardt, tel:                     +49-30 275 96 887,
 e-mail: pia.eberhardt@weed-online.org
  * HELSINKI: 4 July: Launch of banner tour over Finland as a countdown                     to Cancun. Presentation of statement by FoE, Attac and Kepa                     (Service Center
 for Developing Co-operation),
 contact: Anastasia Laitila, tel +358-331 5136,
 Maan ystavat/FoE Finland, Kaisa Eskola, tel +358-50-380 1391,
 e-mail: anastasy@jippii.fi,
  * LONDON, 4 July: Action outside of the Department of Trade and Industry.                     Launch of the 'Cut the Corporate Out of Cancun' campaign website,
 Contact: Dave Timms, WDM,
 tel: +44 207 2727630,
 e-mail: dave@wdm.org.uk,                     http://www.wdm.co.uk
  *PARIS: 3 July: >> Press conference on Cancun and the European’s                     Commission mandate organised by the GATS campaign (40 national                     organisations Trade Unions and association), the Confédération                     Paysanne and Attac
 >> the GATS campaign will send a short declaration all                     over the country (local councils, national government, newspapers,                     etc.)
 Contact: Attac France, Marc Delepouve, Susan George:
 tel. +33 1 69 27 47 15
 email: Marc.Delepouve@univ-lille1.fr
  * ROME: 4 July, symbolic action in front of the Trevy fountain on                     the liberalisation f the water section and national press                     conference,
 contact: mobile: Reform the World Bank Campaign, Antonia Tricarico,
 +39 328 84 85448 (m),
 e-mail: atricarico@crbm.org
  * STOCKHOLM: 4 July: action organised by Attac through the centre of the                     city from mid-day onwards.
 Contact for journalists: Helena Granström,
 tel.:+46-704-226533,
 e-mail: helena.granstrom@swipnet.se                     or
 Contact: Jens Ergon
 +46-707-140473
 mailto:jens@attac.se.
 For pictures see http://www.attac.se.
 *VIENNA:
 4 July: Action in front of the national trade ministry organised                     by the Austrian GATS campaign (Attac, OGB, Greenpeace, Armutskonferenz                     and many more supporting organisations), Action stunt; Austrian                     Trade-Minister Bartenstein is injecting free-trade-medicine                     into developing countries. He is assisted by other European                     trade ministers and some corporate leaders. As a result of                     these free trade-pills developing-countries are about to die..
 See http://www.stoppgats.at,
 Attac, leonhard.plank@attac-austria.org
  (3) Activities in Palermo on 5/6 July.  PALERMO5 July:
 * International seminar at the Philosophical Faculty of the                     University of Palermo with the presence of CEO, WDM, FOEE,                     Greenpeace, ANND,CPE/Via Campesina, Italian Trade Unions etc.
 * Music festival on WTO.
  6 July:* 11.30 a.m., Media conference From Palermo to Cancun: Stop                     WTO planned with Campaign to Reform the World Bank, CEO, FoEE,                     WDM, ANND and Greenpeace at Blow-up center,m Via S. Anna,                     18
 * 2.30 p.m. Handing over of the European civil society call                     for Palermo: NO WTO EXPANSION with an inflatable corporate                     giant and message 'Don't let big business rule the world',
 contact: Luca Manes, ++39 335 5721837
  (3) See European civil society call to EU trade ministers                     in Palermo, 6 July 2003: Withdraw EU demands for the expansion of the                     WTO in Cancun.
 http://www.investmentwatch.org/palermo.html
 (4) See http://www.s2bnetwork.org
 |