WTO seeks pact for poor nations

WTO seeks pact for poor nations

HONG KONG – Trade powers yesterday promised steps to help poorest nations sell more goods while Europe came under renewed pressure to give ground over farm tariff barriers on the eve of a key World Trade Organisation (WTO) conference.

Although the WTO shelved plans for a draft free trade deal at the six-day conference, US Trade Representative Rob Portman made clear that he had “come to work” and was looking for progress in contentious areas of the negotiations. With continuing deep differences between developed and developing countries – particularly over agriculture – forcing the WTO to drop the bar for the Hong Kong meeting, measures for poor states, including duty-free access, have become a litmus test for success at the WTO’s sixth ministerial conference.But while the United States and Brazil, two other leading participants in the 149-state conference echoed Mandelson’s call, they kept up pressure on the EU over farm reform.The EU’s refusal to offer more than an average 39 per cent cut in tariff barriers has been blamed by many farm goods exporters, most notably Brazil and the United States, for a stalemate in agricultural talks, the lynchpin of the WTO’s Doha trade round.”Unless the European Union is able to improve substantially its offer on agricultural goods there will not be a successful (trade) round,” Brazil’s Foreign Minister Celso Amorim told a news conference.Both he and Portman said they hoped for progress on this and other knotty issues at the meeting, which is being attended by some 400 ministers.Around 10 000 anti-globalisation protesters, including South Korean farmers angry at the prospect of more rice imports into their long-protected market, are converging on Hong Kong.Hong Kong has blacklisted some people, particularly from South Korean farmer groups with a reputation for violent protest, in the hope that the territory will be able to avoid the violence that marked the last WTO conference in Cancun, Mexico, in 2003.Cancun broke up in bitter disarray.Ministers and diplomats warn a repeat could kill off the round – launched in late 2001 – and its promise of more economic growth and fewer poor.EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson said the conference should set a new deadline for early 2006 for a draft deal, covering all areas of the Doha round from farm and industrial goods to services and rule changes.A final deal must be concluded by end-2006 or early 2007.- Nampa-ReutersWith continuing deep differences between developed and developing countries – particularly over agriculture – forcing the WTO to drop the bar for the Hong Kong meeting, measures for poor states, including duty-free access, have become a litmus test for success at the WTO’s sixth ministerial conference.But while the United States and Brazil, two other leading participants in the 149-state conference echoed Mandelson’s call, they kept up pressure on the EU over farm reform.The EU’s refusal to offer more than an average 39 per cent cut in tariff barriers has been blamed by many farm goods exporters, most notably Brazil and the United States, for a stalemate in agricultural talks, the lynchpin of the WTO’s Doha trade round.”Unless the European Union is able to improve substantially its offer on agricultural goods there will not be a successful (trade) round,” Brazil’s Foreign Minister Celso Amorim told a news conference.Both he and Portman said they hoped for progress on this and other knotty issues at the meeting, which is being attended by some 400 ministers.Around 10 000 anti-globalisation protesters, including South Korean farmers angry at the prospect of more rice imports into their long-protected market, are converging on Hong Kong.Hong Kong has blacklisted some people, particularly from South Korean farmer groups with a reputation for violent protest, in the hope that the territory will be able to avoid the violence that marked the last WTO conference in Cancun, Mexico, in 2003.Cancun broke up in bitter disarray.Ministers and diplomats warn a repeat could kill off the round – launched in late 2001 – and its promise of more economic growth and fewer poor.EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson said the conference should set a new deadline for early 2006 for a draft deal, covering all areas of the Doha round from farm and industrial goods to services and rule changes.A final deal must be concluded by end-2006 or early 2007.- Nampa-Reuters

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