Trade Text ‘Violates’ Doha Mandate, India Tells West

Author: 
Dipankar De Sarkar, Indo-Asian News Service
Publication Date: 
Sun, 2007-10-07 03:00

GENEVA, 7 October 2007 — India has told key negotiators at the World Trade Organization (WTO) that developing countries will not agree to current trade proposals that ask them to “do more” than wealthy nations in cutting industrial tariffs in the ongoing Doha Round of trade talks.

“Unfortunately in the industrial tariffs text, developing countries are required to do more than developed countries,” Ujal Singh Bhatia, India’s ambassador to the WTO, said Friday, adding that such demands were a “violation” of the mandate agreed by WTO members at a ministerial meeting in Hong Kong in 2005.

“We say ‘please respect the mandate before we sign up,’” he added.

Bhatia, along with the chief negotiators of the United States, European Union and Brazil, was speaking at a power-packed panel discussing agriculture at the WTO Public Forum — an annual event aimed at public consultation on key global trade issues.

The Doha Round of trade talks are based on a set of principles and objectives agreed at the Qatari capital in 2001 — and at Hong Kong later — that are aimed at making the rules governing international trade equally applicable to all countries in order to ensure that developing countries benefit from global free trade.

But the negotiations have teetered on the brink of collapse several times, and the latest attempt to kick start it began Sept. 3 in Geneva, based on lengthy and complex negotiating texts written up by the three chairs of the negotiations committees on agriculture, industrial market access and services.

Bhatia’s comments came after chief US negotiator Joseph Glauber said negotiators had made a “lot of progress” in the last year.

“We now have a text on the table for serious negotiations on NAMA (Nonagricultural Market Access) and agriculture. The solution lies somewhere in those ranges (proposed in the texts). The US has an idea where they might be. If solutions are to be found they will be found in the text in the next few weeks and months,” Glauber said.

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