|
Doha, 14 November 2001
WTO meeting fails the world
|
As trade liberalisation talks ground to a close, the Greenpeace
flagship Rainbow Warrior set sail from
offshore the World Trade Organisation (WTO) meeting site in
Doha, Qatar.
|

Rainbow Warrior arriving in Qatar.
© Greenpeace
|
|
Greenpeace activists inside the meeting unfurled banners calling
for a fundamental transformation of trade rules. The meeting has
concluded with a declaration that falls short of ambitions declared
at the start of negotiations and also disappoints hopes for protection
of communities and the environment.
“This meeting has failed to produce a vision for sustainable development
and the protection of the environment” said Greenpeace International
Political Director Remi Parmentier, speaking from the meeting site.
“The WTO has two crises of confidence: Opposition from the outside
world to this trade liberalisation agenda, and an internal crisis
of dissent among WTO member countries.”
Parmentier called for an international conference to revise the
relationship between the WTO, International Monetary Fund, World
Bank and environmental protection.
This meeting ran into overtime and concluded only in the last
possible hours of discussion. The agreement on environment offers
very little progress in defending environmental protections against
trade concerns.
“Every step of progress on the environment is countered by
contradictory language or harmful measures” said Greenpeace Canada
campaigns director Jo Dufay, on board the Rainbow Warrior. “They
have agreed to study the relationship between trade rules and the
environment, but also said that WTO rules won’t change.” Dufay was
in Doha for the trade meeting.
The agreement on areas for further trade liberalisation was finalised
today after a grueling round-the-clock negotiating session. Apart
from the environment, major differences on investment, ‘dumping’,
agriculture and market access for textiles stalled the talks for
days. Developing nations claimed their needs had not been addressed
by the rich countries, and that unfair pressure was being exerted.
In the end, liberalisation of investment measures was not resolved,
with agreement only that this may undergo further negotiations at
the next Ministerial meeting, two years from now.
Earlier agreement on drug patent issues offers some relief to earlier
WTO agreements. “The whole issue of medicines and the patenting
of life should never have been subject to horse-trading in the first
place,” Parmentier commented.
“They are have come up with a balance of misery, where everyone
is unhappy, especially developing nations. This is no way to run
the world,” Dufay concluded.
More information:
The report “Safe Trade in the 21st Century: the Doha Edition,” contains
the full Greenpeace recommendations - “The Greening of Doha”. To
read the report in English, Arabic, French or Spanish click
here.
Greenpeace
critique of the Draft Ministerial Declaration released by the WTO
on 27 October 2001 and Greenpeace’s proposed alternative.
Greenpeace
International Executive Director, Gerd Leipold, statement on a new
global security.
Press contacts:
Remi Parentier 34 6 375 7357 (Mobile)
JO Dufay +873 324 453 510 (Sat phone)
|