from Reuters Africa
Oxfam is speaking out on the global trade talks. They make issue with the lack of progress, and the proposal that don't give enough support to poorer farmers. - Kale
By Laura MacInnis
GENEVA, The suggestion by top U.S. and EU trade officials that emerging economies need to make big concessions mean there is little hope of reaching a global trade deal this week, the head of Oxfam International said on Monday.
Statements from U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab and EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson saying such concessions were needed to forge a World Trade Organisation (WTO) agreement, were "outrageous", Jeremy Hobbs said.
The aid advocacy group's executive director said the food and fuel price crisis, combined with looming economic trouble, had created hardship in poor countries and made it unreasonable to expect them to give even more at the WTO.
"The hypocrisy is breathtaking and Oxfam is skeptical a deal is possible in that context," he told journalists in Geneva. "It is extremely important that people do not get away with spinning this as 'the developing countries are blocking.'"
The WTO's Doha round was launched in 2001 with the stated aim of helping fight poverty and spur economic development by enabling poor-country producers to sell more of their wares abroad.
But the multilateral negotiations -- which require consensus among all 152 WTO member governments -- have struggled to overcome many countries' resistance to exposing sensitive industries to more foreign competition.
On the first day of a high-stakes negotiating push among ministers in Geneva, rich and poor nations turned the spotlight on each other over who should move first, and by how much.
Anti-poverty activists and development campaigners said they were concerned that Brazil, India and other emerging countries would be squeezed in the talks chaired by WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy, which include about 30 ministers representing a range of interests in the Doha talks.
Nathan Irumba, Uganda's ambassador to the WTO from 1996 to 2004, said he was concerned that developing-country parties to those exclusive, closed-door talks would be pressured to accept proposals that would hurt poorer countries.
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