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- Info
0224
geneva, 24 february 2003
Friends of the Earth Europe, Cooperation
Internationale pour le Developpement et la
Solidarite (CIDSE), British Overseas NGOs for
Development (BOND)
north + south civil society statement on
wto agreement on agriculture talks
Monday, February 24: Civil society groups
from over 30 developing and developed
countries gathered in Geneva over recent days
to challenge negotiators in the World Trade
Organisation (WTO) talks on the new WTO
Agriculture Agreement. The NGOs also focused
their critique on CAP reform proposals due to
be discussed by the EU Council on February
24/25. Today, a statement has been published
at press conferences in Geneva and Brussels
(the Statement is copied at the bottom of
this page).
Negotiators in Geneva are currently
discussing a draft WTO Agreement on
Agriculture proposed by Stuart Harbinson,
chair of the Agriculture Committee. Farmers
from North and South, development NGOs and
consumer and green groups criticise the
proposal's failure to tackle development
concerns, food security and sustaining rural
livelihoods.
The WTO proposal would continue to
effectively legalise dumping - exporting
below the cost of production. Dumping
artificially lowers world prices, destroying
local food production and farmers'
livelihoods. Until the causes of dumping have
been tackled, developing countries need
import control measures to safeguard their
farming communities. In developing countries,
an average of 50% of people make their living
from farming and agriculture, and in some
countries such as Uganda this figure rises to
over 80%. The average EU member state
population reliant on agriculture is 4% (the
UK figure is 1%).
"The system is working against poor farmers
in West Africa. Developing countries need
tariff protection to safeguard the
livelihoods of millions of farmers."
Ndiogou Fall, ROPPA - West African Farmers
Association
"The WTO talks continue to be driven by a
'you liberalize, we subsidize' approach from
the EU and US. Hypocrisy and double standards
still rule the day. The EU's impressive
rhetoric about a 'Doha Development Agenda' is
sounding hollow." Bob van Dillen, CIDSE
(Catholic Aid Agencies) "European citizens
have made it clear they want a sustainable
and equitable farming system that provides
healthy and diverse food. The EU is failing
to deliver this in the WTO and in CAP
reform." Joanna Dober, Friends of the Earth
Europe
"Europe speaks loudly about social
responsibilities, but protects its
agricultural market to the extent that world
prices are deflated. We have no subsidies and
are forced to remove import duties as a
condition for receiving aid. We are being
locked into a cycle of poverty and
marginalisation."
Fiona Black, Jamaican Dairy Herd
Services
Media Contact:
Joanna Dober, Friends of the Earth Europe, +
32 2 542 01 88,
joanna.dober@foeeurope.org
Bob van Dillen, CIDSE +32-2-233 37 51
vandillen@cidse.org
statement from the international civil
society hearing on the wto agriculture
agreement
Geneva, February 21st, 2003
On the eve of a crucial discussion on the
world agricultural trade system, civil
society groups from 30 countries gathered in
Geneva to take stock of the WTO negotiations
on a new Agriculture Agreement. The
discussion centred on the draft text issued
on 17 February by Stuart Harbinson, Chair of
the Agriculture Committee.
Participants at the hearing rejected the
current Harbinson draft modalities text as an
acceptable basis for negotiations. Why?
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It reveals the emptiness of the Doha
Ministerial Declaration's stated intention
of placing development, food security and
rural livelihoods at the heart of the Doha
Round.
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It does not change the underlying
structure of the AoA, which has caused
widespread hardship for farmers around the
world and discourages sustainable models of
agriculture.
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Developing countries face a world in
which developed countries, particularly the
European Union and United States, continue
to dump under priced exports on world
markets. Dumping artificially lowers world
prices, destroying local food production
and farmers' livelihoods.
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The current structure of the Agreement
and the Harbinson text both legalise
dumping, at the same time as they erode
developing countries' only defence against
dumping - tariffs and other border
measures.
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It fails to recognize the central role
played by women in food production and the
nutritional well-being of the family and
community, as well as the particular impact
of trade liberalization on women.
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It ignores the increasing stranglehold
exerted on agricultural trade by a small
number of transnational corporations, which
in turn depresses farmgate prices around
the world.
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The AoA continues to be driven by a
'you liberalize, we subsidize' approach
from the EU and US, as shown by the US farm
bill and the glacial pace of CAP
reform.
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It conflicts with countries'
commitments under the UN Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural rights, and
in particular the right to food.
What participants heard from a number of
agricultural negotiators, from both developed
and developing countries, convinced them that
the agriculture negotiations are still
business as usual: the outcome determined by
horse trading based on economic and political
clout.
We the undersigned call on our governments
to reject the current Harbinson draft
modalities as an acceptable basis for
negotiations. Instead, they should work to
create new trade rules that:
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Address the real source of distortions
in world agricultural markets - the
monopolistic power of global
agri-business
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Take food security and food sovereignty
fully into account, in particular in
allowing developing countries to protect
their poor farmers against low world prices
and to recognize the special cultural role
of food in many communities.
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Allow countries to introduce import
controls and tariffs on dumped agricultural
products
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Act on governments' multilateral
commitment to increase employment by
promoting rural livelihoods. In particular,
taking into account the needs of vulnerable
groups and women, who produce the majority
of the world's food.
Rectify the imbalances between rich and poor
countries in agricultural trade Geneva,
February 21, 2003 Note: for full list of
signatories to the above statement collected
since February 21st, see
www.foeeurope.org/press/2003/JD_24_Jan_statement_WTO_and_CAP.htm
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