| more updates... MINISTERS LIMBER UP FOR WTO SUBSIDIES BATTLEBy Guy de Jonquieres, Frances Williams and John Authers in                     Cancun
 Published: September 9 2003 22:38 | Last Updated: September                     9
 2003 22:38
  Ministers from the World Trade Organisation's 146 members                     on Wednesday enter a bruising battle over the future of global                     agricultural liberalisation that is expected to be crucial                     to prospects for progress in the stalled Doha world trade                     round.  Battle lines were being drawn in the Mexican seaside resort                     of Cancun on Tuesday, as large farm exporting countries and                     developing nations planned a concerted drive for deep cuts                     in rich countries' trade barriers and $300bn ($271bn, 190bn                     pounds) annual farm subsidy programmes.  Breaking the two-year deadlock over farm trade reform is                     widely seen as the linchpin of the five-day meeting and an                     acid test of rich countries' pledges to make the Doha talks                     a "development" round.  Among the protagonists co-ordinating their strategies on                     Tuesday were the Australian-led Cairns Group of 18 food exporting                     nations and a recently formed alliance of 20 developing countries                     led by Brazil, China, India and South Africa.  The two groups agreed on Tuesday to join forces to push                     for faster reforms by the US and the European Union.  The Cairns Groups and the Group of 20 want the Cancun meeting                     to set a firm date for eliminating all forms of export subsidy                     and big reductions in trade-distorting domestic support. However,                     they differ over how far poorer countries should have to open                     their markets.  The meeting is also the focus for several thousand activists                     gathering to promote a wide variety of causes, including economic                     development, environment and human rights.  Some campaigners have vowed to reduce the meeting to a stalemate,                     claiming they have persuaded poorer countries to oppose trade                     liberalisation. Walden Bello of Focus on the Global South,                     which advises several developing countries on WTO tactics,                     said failure to agree in Cancun would be the best possible                     outcome.  However, more mainstream groups such as Oxfam, Christian                     Aid and ActionAid are taking a more positive stance, saying                     elimination of barriers and subsidies by the US, the EU and                     Japan is essential to global economic development.  The meeting faces possible disruption today when several                     thousand Mexican peasants and other demonstrators plan to                     march to the convention centre, defying tight military security                     and two metal fences around the centre of Cancun.  Although goals for this week's meeting have been scaled                     back because of repeated slippages in the Doha talks, ministers                     will seek to hammer out an overall framework for the negotiations                     and to set fresh deadlines.  They will also have to decide whether to keep to plans to                     complete the round by the end of next year. Many trade negotiators                     believe that even if progress is made in Cancun, the deadline                     will be hard to meet.   |