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The No New Round (at the WTO) webcast is now broadcasting. On
10 November 2001, Greenpeace and Indymedia
will webcast from the Greenpeace flagship, Rainbow Warrior, in Doha.
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Doha, 11 November 2001
Doha must address sustainable development
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As Ministers from 142 World Trade Organisation (WTO) member
countries meet in Doha for the 4th WTO Ministerial meeting,
Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth International (FOEI) and
World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) call upon the WTO to live
up to the critical challenge of promoting sustainable development.
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Projection onto Rainbow Warrior sail,
Doha, Qatar.
© Greenpeace
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Since the failed Seattle trade talks, the WTO has come under increasing
fire for failing to deal seriously with the problems of poverty,
economic inequity and sustainable development.
FOEI, Greenpeace and WWF believe that if the WTO is to address
the negative impacts on the environment, WTO members should:
- Affirm that WTO rules respect the autonomy and effectiveness
of multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) and the legitimacy
of non protectionist trade measures used in Meas.
- Recognise the precautionary principle as expressed in various
MEAs such as the Rio Declaration, the UN Convention on Biological
Diversity, and the Kyoto Protocol, as a fundamental and binding
principle of international law also applicable to the WTO;
- Support the conduct of an independent assessment of environmental
and social impacts of WTO agreements;
- Refrain from any negotiations on investment within the WTO;
- Integrate social and environmental considerations into trade
policy-making as a general principle; and
- Eliminate environmentally-harmful subsidies, especially in the
agricultural and fishery sectors.
Tony
Juniper of FOEI said: “World trade rules have harmed the environment,
increased inequality and undermined democracy. Even as these problems
worsen, the rich countries continue to argue that the solution is
to do more of the same. Present trade rules must be changed to promote
fair, equitable and sustainable development, not simply the interests
of big business and wealthy countries.”
Remi Parmentier of Greenpeace International said “We are seeking
a fundamental shift from the WTO: trade rules ought to be subordinate
to environmental rules. Full stop!”
Aimee T Gonzales of WWF said "The fundamental issue at hand
is whether the WTO will respond to the critical challenge of promoting
sustainable development or whether it will continue its past pattern
of denial and failure. The steps above are clear and simple in their
essence and will test governments’ commitment to sustainable development."
Discuss
this story in the Greenpeace cybercentre.
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 Parmentier, Greenpeace International: + 34 637 557 357 or +
31 653 504 702.
Tony Juniper, Friends of the Earth International: + 44 7712 843
207.
Aimee T. Gonzales, WWF: + 41796927973 or + 934 5391832.
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