| Statement by the Third World Network on the events                     of the final day of the Cancun Conference14 Sept 2003
 The Cancún meeting will end without an agreement on                     the Ministerial Text. The immediate reason is that there could not be an agreement                     on the Singapore issues in the exclusive small group consultation                     known as the Green Room meeting. Many developing countries, including the African Carribean                     and Pacific (ACP) Group, the African Union, the LDC Group                     and Asian countries such as India and Malaysia made it clear                     at the Green Room meeting that they would like the Ministerial                     to decide not to launch negotiations on the Singapore issues                     (investment, competition, government procurement, transparency                     trade facilitation). Although they were under pressure (by                     the EC in particular) to agree to launch negotiations on at                     least some of the issues, the developing countries stuck to                     their position. The reasons they gave was that: negotiating these issues                     would divert scarce human and negotiating resources from directly                     trade issues such as agriculture and industrial products;                     agreements on these issues will have serious implications                     for their economy and development prospects; and there is                     no consensus on the modalities of the negotiations. They requested                     that discussions continue on the issues instead of starting                     negotiations for new treaties. Unfortunately, the major developed countries and in particular                     the EU kept on pressing the developing countries to accept                     negotiations. This was the main reason for the deadlock situation                     that developed. The deeper reason for the situation is the untransparent                     and undemocratic system of drafting of texts in the WTO. Although                     about 80 developing countries formally submitted their position                     that they would not want negotiations to start, the Facilitator                     and the conference Chairman came out with a draft that decided                     to launch negotiations in three areas (procurement, trade                     facilitation, investment). This led to frustration and unhappiness, even outrage, at                     the bias shown against the developing countries, which they                     expressed at the HOD meeting on Saturday night and at the                     Green Room meeting. This situation has brought the WTO to the brink of a crisis                     of confidence. The following now needs to be done if confidence                     is to be regained, and if the trade system is to be put back                     on the right track. 1. It is time to recoconsider whether the Singapore Issues                     belong to the WTO, since they are non-trade issues and the                     attemnpts to bring them into the system has caused so much                     acrimony and division for the past many years. 2. The developing countries have organized themselves better                     this time and have shown that they are not ready to be bullied                     into accepting decisions which they are against. The developed                     countries should respect this emergence of the developing                     countries in the system and re-think the way they operate                     in what was once a rich man’s exclusive club. 3. The decision-making system in the WTO should be reformed                     so that there is more transparency and democracy, so that                     developing country members can participate more effectively,                     especially in the drafting of texts. A special committee should                     immediately be set up in the WTO to carry out these democratic                     reforms, which were promised after Seattle but never carried                     out. The way the Cancun meeting has ended without an agreement                     and with such strong divisions is another wake up call for                     the system. It is now urgent that measures be taken to turn                     the WTO into an organization that truly respects the developing                     countries and their development objectives (both in the rules                     and in the decision-making system). This is perhaps the last                     chance to embark on the reforms. If these reforms do not take                     place, there can only be more crises and loss of legitimacy                     and confidence in the system. And the developed countries,                     which have been so resistant to change, would have to carry                     the blame. Martin KhorDirector, Third World Network
 <mkhor@igc.org>
 14 Sept 2003
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