22 September 2003
"If the Prime Minister is so
concerned about the meltdown of the World Trade Organization, she should demand
some decent advice about what really happened at Cancun. Then I challenge her
to a public debate on the issues", said Professor Jane Kelsey.
Professor Kelsey was commenting on
transcripts of the Prime Ministeršs speech in the snap Parliamentary debate
that followed the collapse of the WTO ministerial meeting in Cancun.
"The Prime Minister divided the
world into two camps. The good guys were led by Jim Sutton and the New Zealand
delegation plus the US and EU. They showed good faith, flexibility and
willingness to compromise for the benefit of all.
"Helen Clark knows the track record
of the US and Europe in bullying of smaller powers, including New Zealand. And
she knows how unscrupulously those powers and their corporations have
strip-mined the economies of the Third World.
"Nothing changed at Cancun; itšs just that this time they didnšt get their way", said Professor Kelsey. "The Prime Minister should feel deeply embarrassed about aligning New Zealand with that position."
"She dismissed everyone who opposed
the Doha agenda, including myself, as a 'wrecker' who was prepared to sacrifice
the bounteous gains that will supposedly flow from global free trade",
observed Dr Kelsey.
"The patronizing view, also
expressed by Mike Moore, that governments from poorer countries don't know what
is good for them and have become the dupes of the malevolent non-government
organizations, will simply add fuel to the fire that threatens to engulf the
WTO", said Professor Kelsey.
"It is sad and revealing that politicians and officials were apparently surprised by the events at Cancun and its outcome. The pent up frustration of Third World governments has been growing since the establishment of the WTO. That has been obvious to anyone observing the WTO with any objectivity. The organization has been accelerating towards this kind of crisis since Doha."
"Rather than attacking messengers, the government should be reviewing its advice, policies and strategies. A badly informed trade policy - even if the information is what the government wants to hear - does New Zealand no good. There are opportunities here for a new path that forms coalitions with the poorer countries of the world, while at the same time advancing New Zealand's long term interests."
"I challenge the Prime Minister to get to grips with the issues and debate me in a public forum with a neutral chair, before the next major WTO meeting in December."
Professor Jane Kelsey