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Solidarité internationale et luttes sociales en Afrique subsaharienne |
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Derniers articles :
COSATU rejects new NAMA and Agricultural proposal presented on 25th July 2008
- COSATU
- 25 July 2008
Pour résoudre la crise alimentaire, l’OMC pousse vers toujours plus de libéralisation : de l’huile sur le feu !
- Via Campesina
- 23 juillet 2008
Trade union response to the Non-Agricultural Market Access (NAMA)
- 20 February 2008
Non aux accords de libre-échange, oui à la souveraineté alimentaire et aux droits des peuples !
- Via Campesina
- 13 janvier 2008
Oxfam says US must reform illegal cotton subsidies, or lose credibility, following WTO panel ruling
- Oxfam
- 15 October 2007
Non reprieve for small farmers in WTO draft text
- Focus on the Global South
- 18 July 2007
Reform of US cotton subsidies could feed, educate millions in poor west African countries
- Oxfam
- 21 June 2007
Arrêtez les jeux de pouvoir de l’AGCS contre les citoyens du monde !
- 15 juin 2007
Les Syndicats appellent à une Action sur le Coton
- Confédération syndicale internationale (CSI)
- 16 mars 2007
Les pays riches trahissent leur engagement d’aider les pays pauvres à protéger la santé publique
- Oxfam
- 14 novembre 2006
Rich countries betraying their obligations to help poor countries protect public health
- Oxfam
- 14 November 2006
Cinq ans après, l’accord OMC sur l’accès aux médicaments est un échec
- Act Up-Paris
- 7 novembre 2006
Voir également :
Santé :
En signant ACTA, la France condamnerait l’accès aux médicaments génériques dans les pays en développement
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Standing Firm and Acting Together Against EPAs !
Sommets du G8 - G20 :
Challenge to the G8 Governments
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Rethink unfair EU trade deals before it’s too late
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Call to action against Europe’s aggressive economic agenda in Africa
Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire :
Une réponse à la crise mondiale des prix alimentaires : l’agriculture familiale durable peut nourrir le monde
Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire :
A response to the Global Food Prices Crisis: Sustainable family farming can feed the world
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
EU trade agreements pose huge threat to development, campaigners warn
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Sommet euro-africain de Lisbonne : le sursaut
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Africa-Europe - What alternatives? Final Declaration
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Afrique Europe : Quelles alternatives ? Déclaration finale
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Afrique-Europe – Quelles alternatives ?
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Africa-Europe - What alternatives?
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Oxfam International reaction to EAC-EU free trade agreement
Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE :
Oxfam warns that rushed trade deals pose serious risks to poor countries’ developmentSite(s) web :
Third World Network Africa :
Dakar Déclaration - Pour des politiques agricoles et commerciales solidaires :
Unité de Recherche, de Formation et d’Information sur la Globalisation :
Gender and Trade in Africa (GENTA) :
Bilaterals.org :
Public Citizen - Global Trade Watch :
Action for Southern Africa (ACTSA) :
Alternative Information and Development Centre (AIDC) :
EcoNews Africa :
Integrated Social Development Center (ISODEC) :
International Labour Research and Information Group :
International NGO Campaign on Export Credit Agencies (ECA Watch) :
Stop-Think-Resist EPAs’ campaign :
Trade and Development Studies (TRADES) :
Water Not For Sale :Dernier(s) document(s) :
Des brevets contre des patients: cinq ans après la Déclaration de Doha - Document d’information d’Oxfam International - 14 November 2006 (PDF - 373.7 kb)
L’Afrique et le Cycle de Doha, Un combat pour la sauvegarde du développement - Document d’information Oxfam - 14 November 2005 (PDF - 416 kb)
Africa and the Doha Round: Fighting to keep development alive - Oxfam Briefing Paper - 14 November 2005 (PDF - 276.3 kb) |
Southern African Civil Society Consultation on Trade and HIV/AIDS Statement 1 December 2005 Southern African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN) - http://www.sarpn.org.za/ On the 28-29 November 2005 the Southern African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN) and the Economic Justice Network (EJN) held a regional civil society consultation to discuss the connection between Trade and HIV/AIDS in light of the upcoming Hong Kong World Trade Organisation (WTO) Ministerial meeting in December 2005. The consultation issued a statement at the end of the deliberations, which identified areas of concern within the various WTO agreements. We, members of faith-based organizations, social movements, non-governmental organisations and others from all the countries in the Southern African region, which is in a crisis of growing poverty and HIV/AIDS pandemic, met in Johannesburg, South Africa, 28-29 November 2005. This Southern African Civil Society consultation discussed the situation in our region in relation to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and the forthcoming Doha Round Ministerial conference in Hong Kong, China 13-18 December 2005. We have noted and support the positions of other African CSO meetings, such as the Africa Trade Network meeting in Accra, Ghana 16-19 August 2005. We note also the positions of African governments, in Cairo, Egypt 5-9 June 2005, and the LDC governments’ meeting in Livingstone, Zambia, 25-26 June 2005. We welcome their stand on the prioritisation of the development needs of our continent and people in the current WTO negotiations. We have also noted the recommendations of the Round Table on Benchmarking which took place in Arusha, Tanzania, 21 November 2005. We underscore the formal commitments in the Doha Round to respond to the longstanding development demands of Africa and other developing countries, and the unfulfilled promises to Africa and LDCs by the developed countries ever since the Marrakesh Undertakings in 1994. In this context we make the following demands for the Hong Kong WTO Ministerial and beyond: AGRICULTURE Agriculture is fundamental to the lives and livelihoods of the majority of our people and to our household, national and regional food security. Agricultural production and food security is a crucial component in the struggle against HIV/AIDS, and it is essential to our national and regional development. Therefore we demand:
TRIPS The agreement on the Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) was designed and inserted into the WTO to protect and promote the monopolised control over science and technology by global corporations. This, in turn, undermines the technological and development capacities of our countries and the rights of our governments to secure the production and provision of affordable medicines to deal with the HIV/AIDS epidemic and other diseases. Therefore we demand:
GATS The General Agreement on Trade and Services (GATS) was created and introduced into the WTO to promote the worldwide investment interests and operations of transnational service companies and other service providers. However, services are vital to the delivery of human rights, health services especially for HIV/AIDS, and social and economic development in our countries and region. Therefore we demand:
NAMA The Non Agricultural Market Access (NAMA) proposal is highly imbalanced towards the export interests of transnational corporations (TNCs) into the industrial, mining, forestry, fisheries and all other sectors of our countries. The competitive pressures of TNCs against domestic producers in all these sectors will aggravate unemployment and poverty, and compound the effects of HIV/AIDS. Therefore we demand:
We call on African governments to heed the voices of African people, and provide them with all necessary information through democratic, transparent and consultative processes. We call on African governments to maintain their unity in defense of the development of Africa, form tactical and strategic alliances with the African Caribbean and Pacific group (ACP), and LDCs, and secure the support of other developing country coalitions such as the G20 and the G33. As Southern African civil society we commit ourselves to continue our struggle for trade justice and sustainable development, to advance these positions at the Hong Kong WTO Ministerial, and to actively engage with our governments to ensure that the rights and needs of our people are secured. For further information: Shani Winterstein, Media, Communication & Linkages, Southern African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN) - tel: +27 (0)12 342 9499 - cell: +27 (0)84 850 8440 - fax: +27 (0)12 342 5636 - email |
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