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Doha Round
Lamy still hopeful on Doha Round
Business Standard,
August 13, 2008
The stalled Doha Round of world
trade talks can be concluded by the end of 2008, World Trade
Organization (WTO) Director-General Pascal Lamy said here today. The
WTO chief is on his first visit to the country after the failure of
talks at a crucial mini-ministerial meeting on the Doha Round in
Geneva last month.
“There is still a possibility to
move the talks forward and conclude the negotiations within the
end-2008 time frame which all WTO members have agreed since last
year,” Lamy said at an interaction with members of the Confederation
of Indian Industry (CII). The meet was also attended by Commerce
Minister Kamal Nath.
Lamy said that WTO member nations
have urged him to build on whatever progress was made at the recent
Geneva ministerial.
The WTO chief also held bilateral
meetings with Nath and government officials on issues related to the
Special Safeguard Mechanism (SSM), which is a norm that allows poor
nations to increase duties in order to protect their economies from
surging farm imports. Disagreements between India and the United
States on this issue led to the failure of the Geneva
mini-ministerial.
Nath reiterated India’s stand on
SSM, saying the country’s position on WTO issues has not changed.
“One of our prime concerns is livelihood security and there has to
be a solution to address that. Moreover, interests of infant
industry cannot be compromised,” he told reporters.
Earlier, speaking at the CUTS-Ficci
conference on global development goals, Nath said: “If the basis of
the Doha Round has to see a change in its very objectives, it would
be a tough going for global trade integration.
Revival of the weakest and not
survival of the fittest should form the core of the negotiations”.
Sources said that Lamy met Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh to assess the political will in the Indian
government towards concluding the Doha Round. He is also scheduled
to hold talks with BJP leaders, including former commerce minister
Arun Jaitley, as well as the Federation of Indian Chambers of
Commerce and Industry (Ficci).
Lamy’s India visit is being seen as
an attempt to push for a fresh ministerial by the end of this year.
He will also visit the United States to hold discussions on WTO-related
issues. “My simple message here in Delhi and next week in Washington
is that WTO members should look carefully at what is on the table
and not on the results,” he said.
Lamy said that while technically,
the Doha Round negotiations are ready to be finalised, political
concerns have gained an upper hand. “Of the 20 to-do lists in the
mini-ministerial, 17 have been sorted out. On the issue related to
SSMs, India and the US had major differences,” he added
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