Civil Society Slams Exclusionary Process at the WTO MC10, Conference extends

19 December, Nairobi: The conference which was supposed to conclude yesterday 18th has now spilled over to today 19th over contentious issues between the developing and the developed countries mainly the US and EU.

The process adopted has been very exclusionary restricted to the G5 – US, EU, Brazil, India, China – leaving out the rest of the 162 members. The most outrageous issue is that Africa including the LDCs excluded from the closed-door “green room” talks when the conference is taking place on African soil!

We conducted a protest this morning when Heads of Delegations were entering for their official meeting, calling for unity & solidarity between the developing countries and condemning the US and EU for their ridiculous unacceptable process practice!

Here’s the media advisory:

MEDIA ADVISORY for:

December 19, 2015

Civil Society Slams Exclusionary Process at the WTO MC10

Today, a group of civil society working together through the global Our World Is Not for Sale (OWINFS) network, present in Nairobi for the 10th Ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO), protested the non-transparent and exclusive nature of the negotiations. A small group of five countries, known as the G5, is meeting behind closed doors to draft the text. The protestors pointed out that at the first WTO Ministerial on the continent of Africa, no African countries are present at these secret negotiations. Also, no Least Developed Countries (LDCs) are present in the talks. Civil society pointed out the outrageousness of rich countries pushing to abandon the so-called “Development Round” while excluding LDCs and Africans from the discussions. Protestors stood at the entrance of the Kenya International Conference Center (KICC) holding signs and chanting “Where is Africa in G5?”, “Where are LDCs in G5?”, “Reject G5 Texts!”, “Reject backroom deals!”, and “No Take it or Leave it Text!”

“The negotiations have now been restricted to the G5 – US, EU, Brazil, India, China – leaving out the rest of the 162 members, killing a process of inclusiveness and transparency. It’s a slap in the face to Africa and the LDCs when the ministerial is taking place in Africa. We are now calling for the rejection of the G5 text since it will most probably be an imposed take-it-or-leave-it text,” said Prerna Bomzan, Advocacy Co-ordinator of LDC Watch. LDC Watch is a civil society platform of civil society organizations based in the 48 UN-defined least developed countries (LDCs).

Over 80 civil society experts – trade unionists, farmers, development advocates, and consumer activists – from at least 25 countries have traveled to Nairobi for the 10th Ministerial meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO). Working through the global Our World Is Not for Sale (OWINFS) network and the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC). Civil society delegates will be participating in OWINFS/ITUC activities from Bangladesh, Belgium, Brazil, France, Canada, Germany, Ghana, Greece, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Nepal, the Netherlands, Nigeria, Norway, Pakistan, Philippines, Sierra Leone, Sweden, Switzerland, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, the UK, and the U.S.

###

OWINFS is a global network of NGOs and social movements working for a sustainable, socially just, and democratic multilateral trading system.

www.ourworldisnotforsale.org

Skip to content