libération afrique
Solidarité internationale et luttes sociales en Afrique subsaharienne
 

Accueil | Qui sommes nous ? | Actualité | Dossiers | Pays | Liens
 
Enregistrer au format PDF   afficher une version imprimable de cet article

Europe/ACP - Accords de Cotonou - APE


Stop EPA campaign - http://www.stopepa.org/



Abonnez-vous à la
lettre d'information
de Libération Afrique




Derniers articles :

Des organisations de 30 pays demandent à l’Union européenne de revoir radicalement sa copie - 27 septembre 2009
L’UE doit repenser les accords commerciaux inéquitables avant qu’il ne soit trop tard - Oxfam - 24 avril 2008
Rethink unfair EU trade deals before it’s too late - Oxfam - 21 April 2008
Call to action against Europe’s aggressive economic agenda in Africa - Africa Trade Network - 22 February 2008
EU trade agreements pose huge threat to development, campaigners warn - Oxfam - 20 December 2007
Sommet euro-africain de Lisbonne : le sursaut - Attac France - 12 décembre 2007
Africa-Europe - What alternatives? Final Declaration - 9 December 2007
Afrique Europe : Quelles alternatives ? Déclaration finale - 9 décembre 2007
Afrique-Europe – Quelles alternatives ? - 30 novembre 2007
Africa-Europe - What alternatives? - 30 November 2007
Oxfam International reaction to EAC-EU free trade agreement - Oxfam - 27 November 2007
Oxfam warns that rushed trade deals pose serious risks to poor countries’ development - Oxfam - 19 November 2007


Voir également :


Cameroun : Le gouvernement s’oppose au financement par l’Union Européenne d’un projet en faveur des minorités homosexuelles
Environnement - lutte contre le changement climatique : Les milliers de solutions se trouvent entre les mains des peuples
Agriculture - Accès à la terre - Souveraineté alimentaire - Accaparement des terres : L’Union européenne et ses agrocarburants provoquent une ruée sur les terres africaines
Santé : En signant ACTA, la France condamnerait l’accès aux médicaments génériques dans les pays en développement
Togo : L’Union Européenne prise à témoin des fraudes électorales et des exactions de la dictature togolaise
Niger : L’UE doit appliquer les accords de Cotonou
Financement du développement - Aide publique : CONCORD statement on Council Conclusions on Supporting developing countries in coping with the crisis
Financement du développement - Aide publique : Face à la crise, les gouvernements européens tournent le dos aux pauvres
Financement du développement - Aide publique : European governments U-turn on the poor as economic crisis grips
Forum social mondial de Tunis - mars 2013 : Déclaration de la 7ème édition du Forum des Peuples
Mauritanie : En Mauritanie les migrants font l’objet d’arrestations illégales
Financement du développement - Aide publique : Baisse de l’aide au développement des pays riches pour une deuxième année consécutive
Financement du développement - Aide publique : Scandalous lack of progress in EU development aid
Financement du développement - Aide publique : Scandaleux manque de progrès dans l’aide européenne promise aux pays en développement
Mali : Appel de l’Association Malienne des Expulsés et de son collectif de soutien


Site(s) web :

Arrêter les accords de libre échange ACP-UE :
ACP civil society forum :
Epawatch :
Stop-Think-Resist EPAs’ campaign :
Campagnes APE 2007 :
Campagne Stop APE Belgique :
Stop APE Campaign :
Afrique-Europe – Quelles alternatives? :
Bilaterals.org :
Trade and Development Studies (TRADES) :
Unité de Recherche, de Formation et d’Information sur la Globalisation :


Dernier(s) document(s) :

Economic Partnership Agreements: The new game of divide and rule - By the Labour Resource and Research Institute (LaRRI) - 15 September 2008 (Word - 166.5 kb)
Partenariat ou jeu de pouvoir - Comment l’Europe devrait intégrer le développement dans ses accords commerciaux avec les pays d’Afrique, des Caraïbes et du Pacifique - Oxfam Briefing Paper - 30 April 2008 (PDF - 643.9 kb)
Une question de volonté politique: Comment l’Union Européenne peut préserver l’accès au marché pour les pays ACP en l’absence d’APE - Un rapport de Third World Network Africa et d’Oxfam - 25 April 2007 (PDF - 373.9 kb)
Trade traps: Why EU-ACP Economic Partnership Agreements - By ActionAid - 4 February 2007 (PDF - 764.2 kb)
Évaluation à mi parcours des négociations de l’APE entre les régions ACP et l’Union européenne - Contribution indépendante des réseaux régionaux d’organisations paysannes (EAFF, PROPAC, ROPPA, SACAU, WINFA) - 1 January 2007 (PDF - 487.3 kb)
Partenaires inégaux : Comment les Accords de Partenariat Economique (APE) UE-ACP pourraient nuire aux perspectives de développement d’un grand nombre de pays parmi les plus pauvres - Document d’information d’Oxfam - 27 September 2006 (PDF - 243.5 kb)
La négociation des accords de partenariat économique avec les pays d’Afrique, des Caraïbes et du Pacifique - Rapport d’information de la Délégation pour Union Européenne de l’Assemblée Nationale française, par Jean-Claude Lefort, député - 5 July 2006 (PDF - 1.3 Mb)
The trade escape - WTO rules and alternatives to free trade Economic Partnership Agreements / Les règles de l’OMC et des alternatives aux accords de partenariat économique - ActionAid report - 2 September 2005 (PDF - 802 kb)

Standing Firm and Acting Together Against EPAs !
Declaration of 11 Annual Review and Strategy Meeting of Africa Trade Network - Accra Ghana, 25- 28, August 2008

28 August 2008
Third World Network Africa - http://www.twnafrica.org


The Africa Trade Network, the broadest, longest -standing network of African social, labour, women’s, faith-based, developmental, environmental, farmers, human rights and other organisations, dealing with the role and effects of international trade and trade agreements in relation to Africa’s needs and aspirations at local, national regional and continental levels, had its 11 Annual Review and Strategy meeting in Accra, Ghana, from 25 to 28 August.

We have, for many years, worked actively with civil society forces to engage with African and other developing country governments resisting the trade and investment liberalisation agenda of the more powerful governments. Such cooperation and coordination has contributed to the ability of African and other developing country governments to create effective alliances in the WTO to promote their development needs and demands, to expose the self-serving strategies and hypocrisies of the US and the EU, and to block their aggressive agendas. In this regard, we welcome the continued rejection by these governments of the anti-developmental content and orientation of the WTO’s Doha round.

Members of ATN have also been actively engaged with African governments and civil society forces on the proposed EU’s misleadingly entitled “Economic Partnership Agreements” with African (and Caribbean and Pacific) countries. We see clearly that these EPAs are not fundamentally concerned about African development but are designed to further the geo-economic aims of the ‘Global Europe’ strategy being pushed from Brussels in the interest of European corporations and capital.

We are therefore determined to Stop EPAs altogether. But, despite our active engagement with African governments, and the criticism and active opposition against these EPAs by many African governments — both publicly and in private — the EU has managed to pressurize eighteen African governments into initialing IEPAs and committing to further negotiations on ‘Interim EPAs’. Most of these IEPAs are one-to-one engagements between the EU and individual African governments, while five countries are negotiating within one of the established African regions, namely the East African Community. Other African regions have, in the EPA negotiating processes, been divided and their coherence and very future imperiled.

At the same time, a larger number of African governments have not entered into these IEPAs. We commend all such resistant governments and urge them to remain steadfast. We commit ourselves to work with them and to actively engage with all the other African governments on the following terms and understandings:

1. The IEPAs were merely an emergency defensive measure taken at the end of 2007 under the undue pressure of the EU’s threat to disrupt exports from African (and other and Pacific) countries into the European market (with many LDC, who did not need to, even pressured to join).

2. These ‘interim EPAs’, initiated only as statements of intent under conditions of extreme pressures, cannot be accepted as being legally binding and can be challenged and blocked altogether on the basis of a number of legal instruments, such as the Vienna Convention on International Treaties.

3. The IEPA terms cannot be regarded as being set in stone. However, the mere removal of some of the most contentious issues – above all, the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) clause and the “standstill clause” prohibiting the flexible use by African governments of export duties and other support measures to their producers - will not alter the fundamentally anti-developmental import of the highly imbalanced nature of the tariff reduction ‘reciprocities’ demanded by the EU.

4. The so-called more “development friendly” insertions into IEPAs proposed by some African governments and NGOs, and others in Europe – such as modified rules of origin, and the removal of technical barriers to trade (TBTs) in the EU – may to some degree facilitate trade, but will also serve, more fundamentally, to reinforce the heavy trade orientation and dependence of Africa exporters on the EU market, and the traditional “supply role” of (primary commodities and raw materials by) African economies to the EU.

5. Similarly, the proposed provision of increased aid by the EU is supposedly to improve Africa’s “supply capacities” to be able to take advantage of the anticipated increased market access into the EU. However, in reality, the development and diversification of African productive capacities require a wide range of programs and policies, such as the strategic application of tariff and other instruments, that will be severely constrained within the proposed EPA terms

6. In parallel, the exclusion of some “sensitive products” and the proposals by some African governments and NGOs for slightly “longer time-frames” for the phasing- in of tariff liberalisation are also fundamentally misconceived because the changing needs of current and future products and production sectors within their countries cannot be definitively determined in advance, and policies in these regards must not be fixed in advance and as a priori commitments in an international treaty

7. In addition to the above, the most serious threat of all arises from the drive by the EU, and the seeming accommodations by some African governments, to extend the IEPAs into “full and comprehensive” EPAs, incorporating the EUs “new generation” demands for the opening up of African services and public tenders (so-called government procurement) to EU companies, and fixing the terms and rights of European investors and financial operators, together with other terms serving EU interests in Africa.

We urge African governments to re-unite in their respective regional communities, and to use broader African unity within and through the African Union to create a much stronger and determined resistance to the EU:

- to act decisively on their own declarations that no agreements with the EU can take precedence over, or counter, their commitments to their own regional cooperation and integration aims and programs;

- to firmly resist EU maneuvers in their current or future negotiations to draw them into full EPAs.

We also note and stress that it is most unwise and inappropriate for African governments to be entering into a far-reaching, long-term, fixed and highly questionable and contentions agreements with the EU, or any of the other powers and international forces, especially in the context of the current unstable and changing global conjuncture. This includes
- international energy and food crises affecting African most seriously;
- declining legitimacy of the IMF and WB and the WTO;
- erosion and discrediting of the neoliberal paradigm
- shifts in the global balance of power and the range of forces, especially in the South with which Africa can ally itself.

We commit ourselves to work with African governments in the quest to achieve more equitable relations with Europe that protect our sovereignty and autonomous development options.

We pledge to work with and support the movement of citizen’s groups in Africa against Europe’s self-serving EPA agenda, and to strengthen the demand on our governments to stand firmly together in the interests of our peoples and our countries, regions and the whole continent

We call on civil society organizations and other citizens groups in Europe and other parts of the world who are also resisting European free trade agreements to strengthen their active solidarity with our campaign to stop the EPAs.





Accueil | Qui sommes nous ? | Actualité | Dossiers | Pays | Liens
Libération Afrique c/o Cedetim - 21ter, rue Voltaire - 75 011 Paris - France- Tél : +33 (0) 1 43 71 62 12 -
Ce site est réalisé avec PHP, MySQL et SPIP, logiciels libres sous licence GNU/GPL

Warning: preg_split() [function.preg-split]: Compilation failed: POSIX named classes are supported only within a class at offset 13 in /var/alternc/html/i/ipam/liberationafrique/ecrire/inc/syndic.php on line 145

Warning: preg_match_all() [function.preg-match-all]: Compilation failed: POSIX named classes are supported only within a class at offset 14 in /var/alternc/html/i/ipam/liberationafrique/ecrire/inc/syndic.php on line 166