|
OECD
steps up effort to subvert Supachai at WTO
Rohit
Bansal
New Delhi, Dec 2: India will convey its strong reservations
on any effort to undermine the authority of the incoming director-general
of the World Trade Organisation (WTO). A top ranking trade
official told The Financial Express from Geneva
that India will refuse to be a party to any move to give present
director-general Mike Moore another position within the WTO.
The official was reacting to strong suggestions that Mr Moore,
whose term is ending on August 30 next year, was working hard
to get a newly created job, as chairman of the trade negotiating
committee (TNC).
The TNC, which is due to be
constituted soon, will be responsible for crucial modalities
of the WTO negotiating process. “Any eventual chairmanship
of Mr Moore is seen as a sure sign that developed countries
in the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) will hijack its working, with consequent implication
on the interests of the rest of the world,” the official said.
Mr Moore, a former prime minister of New Zealand, and former
deputy minister of Thailand Supachai Panitchpakdi, had fought
a bitter battle in 1999 for the post of WTO D-G. A compromise
solution allowed a split in the D-G’s six-year tenure, equally
between both candidates. It was confirmed that Mr Moore has
established contact with European trade commissioner Pascal
Lamy and US trade representative Robert Zoellick for the position
of head of TNC, and he has been assured of support, “given
his experience in launching the New Round of trade negotiations”.
The Indian negotiator, who spoke on strict conditions of anonymity,
said the chairman of the WTO general council Stuart Harbison
of Hong Kong, may be acceptable to India as head of TNC, but
that too if he sends out sufficiently re-assuring messages
on his neutrality. “If Mike (Moore) brooked no interference
from (Peter) Sutherland and (Arthur) Dunkel, how can he expect
Supachai (Panitchpakdi) to accept such an crazy situation,”
the angry negotiator said.
Efforts by The Financial Express to seek any
detailed response from Mr Panitchpakdi—he is on a stop-over
speaking engagement at the WTO-CII summit—did not succeed.
“All I would say is that as D-G I shall endeavour to do my
best to keep the interests of each member country by my side,
and that I am not signing up for a political position in the
Democratic Party of Thailand,” he said cryptically.
When pushed further, he said, “Going back on my commitment
now?
You must be kidding! Fine, I do realise that replacing Mr
Chaun Leekpai (as head of the Democratic Party) might make
me prime minister, but there is no truth in my interest in
that position for the next three years. I am committed to
being D-G of WTO”.
But what about other positions? “Well, you can include my
non-availability for the secretary-generalship of the United
Nations! There will be no curtailment in my tenure at the
WTO,” Mr Panitchpakdi remarked, tongue firmly in cheek. Minutes
later, he went on to preface his statement at the WEF-CII
summit, by re-iterating his firm intention to be WTO D-G from
September 1 next year. “I haven’t had the inside track in
Qatar, as I went there only as a guest, but the road will
not be lined with roses,” he observed.
|