NavegaçãoIniciar sessãoO sítio do cidadão jornalistaÀ procura de outras fontes de informação |
Stop the 'EPAs' offensive by the EU against the Southern African Development CommunitySource:p.1 (2007)Notes:Statement that was agreed at the Peoples Summit in Lusaka, Zambia, 16th August 2007, by more than three hundred participating organisations from the whole of Southern Africa, and endorsed by further hundreds of civil society organisations from the whole region meeting at the same time as the SADC Civil Society Forum.Full Text:Hundreds of representatives of social and labour organisations, faith-based, community-based and health networks, small farmers, traders, women and youth organisations, and developmental, human rights and environmental NGOs from across the whole of the Southern African region have gathered in a Peoples Summit in Lusaka, Zambia, 15-16 August 2007, parallel to the SADC Heads of State summit. We have discussed many issues of common concern to us all over many years, but we are agreed that there is now an urgent generalised threat hanging over the whole future of SADC. This arises from the insistence of the European Union (EU) that SADC, like other regional groupings in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific (the ACP countries) must sign a far-reaching trade liberalisation agreement with the EU. This has been misleadingly entitled an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). However, we have already experienced the damaging effects of trade liberalisation on:
We are also aware that the 'trade-related' terms that the EU is inserting centrally within the EPAs as "new generation" issues - above all investment liberalisation, the opening up of all services sectors and of governments procurement to foreign companies - have already been resisted by alliances of developing countries within the WTO, including by ACP countries as part of the Group of Ninety (G-90). This united opposition is because they are aware of the potential dangers of such externally imposed liberalisation terms against their own national and regional development options and strategies. Thus WE DEMAND that
We DEPLORE the splitting up of SADC into two groups negotiating EPAs with the EU. This is not only weakening them now but is also placing at risk the future development cooperation and integration of the whole of SADC. We are already facing drawn-out and complicated processes of coordinating and accommodating the needs of our peoples, and our countries of different size and levels of development. This will be made much more complicated and even contradicted by separate external trade and trade-related agreements signed by half the members of SADC. This is also why South Africa's separate bilateral trade agreement with the EU is already a complicating factor within SACU and within SADC. Thus WE DEMAND that the governments of SADC
[This statement has been endorsed also by the SADC Civil Society Forum, meeting in Lusaka 14-16 August] |
PesquisarPróximos eventos
Informação áudioSobre os EPA (Economic Partnership Agreements)Documentação sobre o processo negocial entre a União Europeia e os países ACP (África, Caraíbas e Pacífico). |