| Trade talks behind closed doors   Davos, 24.01.2004 - Today trade envoys of some 20 select                     members of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) are set to meet                     in Davos to try to kick start international trade negotiations.                     The so-called 'informal meeting' intends to revive trade                     talks collapsed in Cancun (Mexico) in September 2003. Ministers                     meet at a closed-door gathering in parallel to the annual                     meeting of the 'pro-business' World Economic Forum.   At the "Public Eye on Davos", the alternative                     conference to the World Economic Forum annual meeting, environmental                     and development organisations explain the dangers of such                     meetings. They reiterate their warning that no WTO agreement                     is still better than a wrong agreement, especially an agreement                     of the kind the industrialised world hopes to reach. The world's                     top CEOs gathering here are expected to lobby trade negotiators                     to expand the remit of the WTO in order to gain access to                     new markets.   "It is scandalous that trade negotiators meet with                     big business and ignore demands of the small farmers or indigenous                     peoples forced off their land by multinational corporations,"                     said Tony Juniper, Vice-President of Friends of the Earth                     International. "The list of cases where corporations                     have influenced trade policy or called for the use of trade                     agreements to block action for the environment or society                     is long. The last thing we need now, as the failures of corporate                     globalization become ever clearer, is for corporations to                     increase the potential they have to promote their business                     aims at the expense of the public interest, the environment                     or democracy. But that is exactly what is happening in Davos                     today, and that is why we are here" he added.   According to the development NGO Berne Declaration, it is                     pointless to carry out trade negotiations if the reasons for                     the breakdown of trade talks in Cancun continue to be ignored                     by the governments of the developed world. The Cancun talks                     collapsed because the industrialised world insisted on extending                     the scope of the WTO to new issues, in particular to an agreement                     on investment.   "Instead of focusing on the so-called "new issues"                     the WTO should make an assessment of the impacts of the Uruguay                     Round on developing countries, before a new trade agreement                     is signed. The predominance of women in small scale agriculture                     and the critical role they play must be recognised" said                     Phides Mazhawidza from Gender and Trade Network in Africa                     (GENTA).   "An investment agreement within the WTO would grant                     corporations new rights in the developing world without establishing                     new duties or responsibilities. In this way, the developing                     world would be, in practise, forbidden to follow development-oriented                     policies," said Marianne Hochuli of the Berne Declaration.                     For more information contact:  Marianne Hochuli, Berne Declaration +41 1 277 70 00Toni Jupiter, Friends of the Earth, +44 771 284 32 07
 Phides Mazhawidza, Gender and Trade Network + 263 1 180 23                     68
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