| more updates... Cancun Ministerial starts in shadow of protests and                     an untransparent processTWN Report from Cancun, 11 Sept 2003 (By Martin Khor)
  The WTO's Fifth Ministerial Conference started on 10 September                     with an Opening Ceremony cum Business Session where some key                     procedural decisions were announced by the Conference Chairman,                     Mexican Foreign Relations Secretary Luis Ernesto Derbez, without                     an opportunity for delegates to either comment or approve.  The pattern was thus set for a repeat of a series of untransparent                     processes, similar or possibly worse than those practiced                     at the Doha Ministerial of 2001. Developing countries will                     be placed at serious disadvantage resulting from these processes                     and now face an uphill battle to avoid adverse outcomes in                     substantive areas such as the Singapore issues, agriculture                     and non-agriculture market access, implementation and S and                     D treatment.  Even as Ministers and other delegates listened to the ceremonial                     opening speeches and prepared for the tough negotiations ahead,                     the Conference's first day was overshadowed by other events                     in and outside the Conference hall that dramatically highlighted                     the deep public disenchantment with the WTO.  As WTO director-general Supachai Panitchpakdi was making                     his speech, about 40 NGO representatives wearing black tapes                     across their mouths stood up in the hall, displayed small                     placards with words such as "WTO Obsolete" and "WTO                     Anti Development" and chanted slogans including "Shame."                     This lasted for half an hour as security guards looked on                     helpless.  Outside, on the streets up to the border of the "Hotel                     Zone" where the tourist hotels and the conference center                     are located, thousands of farmers and indigenous people backed                     by NGOs marched in a peaceful demonstration against the WTO.                     A group of Korean farmers rammed a steel barricade on the                     road that was meant to prevent protestors from entering the                     zone.  One of the farmers, 56 year old Lee Kyung Hae, a former                     President of the Korean Farmers' Federation, climbed to the                     top of the fallen barricade and then stabbed himself. Taken                     to hospital, he later passed away. Earlier this year, Lee                     had protested for several weeks outside the gates of the WTO                     building in Geneva, handing out pamphlets about the plight                     of farmers and the destruction of rural communities by WTO                     rules.  His suicide shocked the other farmers and protestors on                     the streets, as well as the WTO delegates inside the hall,                     where the conference has so far been dominated by preparations                     for the agriculture negotiations to come. The fact that a                     farmers' leader had been driven to his death just a short                     distance from the WTO conference hall, due clearly to frustration                     with the WTO agriculture rules, added a thick layer of seriousness                     to the negotiatons which only yesterday some Ministers had                     referred to as a matter of "life or death" for small                     farmers.  The Ministerial Conference's Opening Ceremony came in three                     parts: an official ceremony (with speeches by Mexican President                     Vicente Fox, the WTO Director-General, Mexican Foreign Relations                     Secretary Luis Ernesto Derbez, UNCTAD Secretary General Rubens                     Ricupero (representing the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan),                     and the General Council Chairman, Carlos Perez de Castillo),                     an official portion of the Opening of the Business Session,                     and an "informal" portion of the Business Session.                    During the whole procedure, the draft Ministerial Text drawn                     up by Perez de Castillo was explicitly "submitted"                     and implicitly accepted as the main basis for negotiations,                     though there was no formal "adoption" by the Chairman                     or "approval" by the delegates.  In his speech, Perez de Castillo dwelt on the Geneva process                     and described his draft Ministerial Text as being submitted                     "under his own responsibility" in close cooperation                     with the Director General and that the draft is not agreed                     on and that convergence in some issues had not emerged. He                     added he was submitting this draft to the Conference with                     a letter which he said accounted for the divergence of views                     in key areas.  Mexican Secretary Derbez, at the "informal" part                     of the Business Session, announced that informal meetings                     would be held to facilitate consensus on a Text. Each morning                     a heads-of-delegation (HOD) meeting would be held at which                     Ministers could bring two officials. A final HOD meeting would                     be held on the last day just prior to the concluding plenary,                     "to review results in all areas."  He announced the appointment of the following Ministers                     as "facilitators" for five areas: George Yeo of                     Singapore (agriculture), Henry Tang (NAMA), Mukhisa Kituyi                     (Kenya), Pierre Pettigrew (Canada) and Clement Rohee (other                     issues).  Derbez made special mention on agriculture: that all opinions                     and voices would be heard, that various contributions had                     been made and that these adopted a similar structure. [This                     reference to agriculture was apparently in response to the                     demand by the group of 21 developing countries that their                     proposal be taken on an equal footing with the Castillo draft                     text as the basis for negotiations].  Derbez then closed the Opening Ceremony. And thus were implicitly                     accepted or adopted the draft Text of Castillo (that the author                     had admitted was not an agreed text), the organization of                     work with its predominance of informal consultations; and                     the draft Text and the Chairman's appointment of facilitators.  The opening part of the Business Session was held in the                     same big hall that was the venue of the Opening Ceremony,                     where chairs were arranged concert style. Thus, delegations                     did not have cards with their countries' names, there were                     no microphones provided for delegates to speak from the floor,                     and the Chairman did not invite comments.  This procedure thus followed the practice pioneered in Doha,                     where the very contentious draft Declaration had been adopted                     at the ceremonial opening ceremony where delegates had no                     opportunity to speak. In fact, the "adoption" of                     the Cancun facilitators and organization of work was even                     more untransparent and non-participatory than what happened                     in Doha.  At the Doha Ministerial, the draft Ministerial Declaration                     tramsitted from Geneva by the Chairman of the Generalo Council                     on "his own personal responsibility", had been "adopted"                     at the ceremonial Opening. But the Chairman's announcement                     on the appointment of facilitators and the organization of                     work was done in a business meeting in a different room after                     the Opening Ceremony. Delegations had the opportunity to discuss                     and criticise the process. The Chairman however ignored the                     criticisms, and then proceeded with the scheme he had announced.  At Cancun, the announcements were made just after the inaugural                     session, and there was no opportunity for discussion or even                     adoption of the procedures and the facilitators.  Delegates from some eveloping countries privately voiced                     frustration and apprehension about how the Opening session                     had been run and also how this was a foretaste of more non-participatory                     processes ahead at the Conference.  They were particularly upset that the Minister of Canada,                     which is a well known strong advocate of negotiatons on the                     Singapore issues, was chosen to chair the discussions on these                     issues, as he would not be able to maintain neutrality. The                     officials noted that Mr Pettigrew had also been the facilitator                     for Sijngapore issues in Doha, and he had not been fair to                     the developing countries that opposed negotiations.  In fact the unhappy experience in Doha had led several developing                     countries to submit proposals in the General Council last                     year for implementing proper procedures for future Ministerials,                     including that ceremonial opening sessions should not be used                     to adopt business decisions, and that facilitators (if they                     are required) should be selected by members and not the Conference                     Chairperson.  These proposals for reforming the rule-less manner in which                     Ministerials are run were not accepted due to objections,                     principally from the major developed countries.  At a press conference this afternoon, Dr Supachai gave more                     details on how the "informal consultations" would                     operate. The facilitators would hold bilateral meetings with                     members, termed as "confessionals", and they would                     report to the HOD open-ended meetings each morning. To avoid                     "cramming" on the last day, facilitators are expected                     to give substantial reports of their consultations to the                     Chairman by Friday.  The Director General's description of the process would                     imply that a new draft of the Ministerial Text or Declaration                     would be issued on Friday or Saturday.  But it is not clear how the drafting is going to be done,                     and who will do it. It is also far from clear whether there                     will be time or procedures available to allow members to make                     comments on the revised draft or drafts, and more importantly,                     to revise the texts until everyone is satisfied or at least                     find it acceptable.  At previous Ministerial (for example Doha 2001 and Singapore                     1996), revised (and final) drafts were produced on the last                     day or the last night --and it is unclear till now who did                     the drafting - following exclusive "Green Room"                     meetings. Members were then told not to alter any part of                     the text as this would "unravel" the whole draft                     and there was simply no time left for further negotiations,                     so every Member had to accept it.  At the end of the Singapore Ministerial, the then Director                     General Mr. Ruggerio, made a pledge to Members and the media                     that this practice of exclusive meetings and last-minute pressure                     for all members to accept a Declaration on a fait accompli                     basis would never happen again in future Ministerials.  Despite this, the practice of exclusive meetings and the                     eleventh-hour presentation of draft Declarations on a take-it-or-leave-it                     basis continued at Ministerial Conferences that followed.  The practice of Chairpersons conducting consultations with                     various parties (instead of enabling members to negotiate                     among themselves) and then doing their own drafting of texts                     started before the Doha Ministerial. It has now expanded to                     the extent that the Chairs of negotiating groups and working                     groups, as well as the Chairs of the General Council and of                     Ministerials, are now drafting the important texts "on                     their own responsibility". Even if the drafts do not                     enjoy the support by large numbers of members, they are nevertheless                     "sent on" or "transmitted" again on their                     own responsibility.  There is apprehension among several delegates from developing                     countries that the undemocratic and untransparent practice                     of drafting and re-drafting of texts will be repeated in Cancun.  The frustration of having to adopt an unacceptable draft                     as the basis for negotiations emerged especially in relation                     to agriculture. Brazil and other countries made clear they                     would not accept the Castillo draft. In the past few days,                     the Group of 21 developing countries made public their demand                     that this draft cannot be the basis (or at least the sole                     or even the main basis) for the negotiations on agriculture.  They demanded that the G-21 agriculture proposal (now an                     official Ministerial document) be given equal status as the                     Castillo draft. For a while, it seemed possible that Brazil                     and/or other countries might officially object at the Opening                     Session to the Castillo draft being the basis for negotiatons                     in Cancun.  This apparently led to Castillo making a mention at the                     inaugural session that there had been contributions from members                     in relation to agriculture. It was an implicit recognition                     that other texts count as well. But even in this case it is                     not at all clear that this gives the G-20 paper an equally                     prominent status as Annex A on agriculture in the draft text.  At this early stage of the Conference, it is also not at                     all clear to officials or Ministers what procedures are going                     to be implemented, and most importantly, how the all-important                     Conference texts are going to be drafted, and what time or                     opportunity will be available for members to revise the drafts                     to their satisfaction.  It now looks likely that a variation of the rule-less and                     unpredictable method of operating Ministerials that have characterized                     the WTO in its short history will again be repeated in Cancun.  If this indeed happens, the developing countries are likely                     to be on the receiving end of an imbalanced outcome. If this                     scenario unfolds, it then remains to be seen whether developing                     countries will stand against these practices in sufficient                     numbers and strength.   |