| AFTINET ALERT 4/4/04 Don't trade off medicines and media                     for sugar  Media reports like the Sydney Morning Herald one below indicate                     that the AustralianTrade Minister is making concessions on                     social policies just to get sugar back on the table in the                     USFTA negotiations, after the US suddenly removed it last                     week. Here is a media release which went out today. If you                     can please email the Minister's office to tell them not to                     trade off medicines and media for sugar.  Email mark.vaile.mp@aph.gov.au  MEDIA RELEASE February 4, 2004  Don't trade off medicines and media for sugar says                     Fair Trade Network  "The Trade Minister is apparently trading off access                     to affordable medicines and Australian media content just                     to get sugar back on the table in the USFTA negotiations,"                     said Dr Patricia Ranald, policy manager at the Public Interest                     Advocacy Centre and Convenor of the Australian Fair Trade                     and Investment Network.  "Media reports today imply that Australia has given                     ground on allowing US companies to legally challenge investment                     rules, higher prices for generic medicines and Australian content in emerging media like digital                     television," said Dr Ranald.
 "It appears the Minister has fallen for the oldest trick                     in the book, as the US suddenly removed sugar last week to                     force further concessions. The Australian negotiating position                     seems to be going backwards."  "This is completely unacceptable. The danger is that                     the Minister will cobble together any deal to save face. Because                     of the secrecy of the negotiations, nasty trade-offs could                     be hidden in the details and we will not see the full agreement                     until after the deal is done," warned Dr Ranald. "                    "The government kept denying that these policies were                     on the table but had to admit they were when community organisations                     exposed the real agenda. Our Fair Trade Network of 83 community                     organisations has argued from the start of the negotiations                     that social policies which have nothing to do with trade should                     not be negotiated behind closed doors," added Dr Ranald.                    "We challenge the Minister to keep the public commitments                     made not to trade off these policies," Dr Ranald added.                    ------  Trade talk sweetens with sugar on table Tom Allard, and Marian Wilkinson, Sydney Morning Herald February                     4.
 A free-trade deal with the United States is expected to be                     completed by the end of the week after the US agreed to put                     access to its heavily protected sugar market back on the negotiating                     table.  After marathon talks and a palpable sense of gloom among                     Australian trade officials and lobbyists participating in                     negotiations in Washington, there was a more positive tone                     after talks yesterday.  "We have a real chance of reaching a deal this week,"                     said a spokesman for the Minister for Trade, Mark Vaile. "We                     can't stay in Washington indefinitely but we are now in the                     final stages of negotiations."  The president of the National Farmers Federation, Peter Corish,                     who has been sceptical about the deal, said he was "more                     optimistic", and a deal would be finalised "in two                     to three days at the most".  Mr Corish said disputes over non-agricultural issues - especially                     foreign investment access, the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme                     and local-content rules for media - were all but resolved,                     leaving negotiators to concentrate on the most contentious                     area, farm exports.  Insiders said sugar, which the US said last month would not                     be part of the trade agreement, was back on the table.  The powerful US sugar lobby has threatened a political backlash                     if barriers to Australian producers are removed.  Mr Vaile's spokesman would not comment on the inclusion of                     sugar in the talks, except to say Australia would not sign                     a deal that excluded sugar.  In a sign the Australian farming lobby is prepared to compromise,                     Mr Corish said the most important outcome was that canegrowers                     eventually got "unimpeded access" to the US market, rather than                     removing barriers immediately.
 A substantially better deal for dairy and beef producers                     is also a key Australian demand that remains unresolved.  Mr Vaile's spokesman confirmed the progress on non-agricultural                     issues.  The US has asked for its companies to have the right to legally                     challenge the Government if it refuses investment plans, and                     pushed for higher prices on generic pharmaceuticals to reward                     the intellectual property of US drugmakers.  The US has also called for local-content restrictions to                     be abolished on emerging media such as digital television.                    "We are very keen to conclude this negotiation but we                     won't do a deal at any cost," Mr Vaile's spokesman said.                    The US trade representative, Robert Zoellick, is due to leave                     Washington at the end of the week, giving the talks an effective                     deadline.  If talks fail - and insiders said that was a real possibility                     - the back-up is to adjourn discussions until after the US                     presidential elections.  Meanwhile, the head of the World Bank, James Wolfensohn,                     said he was "ambivalent" about the trade agreement                     because bilateral and regional deals could come at a cost                     to poorer countries.  "It would be a tragedy if the world fragmented into                     regional trade arrangements because it leaves people out,"                     he said in an interview in Washington.  He said the exclusion of many developing countries would                     create "an imbalance that cannot be sustained".                     
 
                                         
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