TERRAVIVA, the Daily Record of Copenhagen+5.

Pomp and Circumstance As Cotonou Agreement is Signed  

By Brian Kenety  

COTONOU, Benin (IPS) - The road to the 'Friendship Stadium' in the  capital of Benin is paved - but only just.   With thick streaks of soil encroaching upon it, the journey for the  throngs of motorbike taxis that clog its single lane, is a treacherous one.  Last Friday,  however, the road took on a different hue. 

 Alongside the makeshift shanties and workshops, the traffic gave way to a  parade of official delegations. It was unlike anything seen before in this  West African nation - among the poorest in the world.   The delegations included finance and development ministers from the 15  European Union (EU) and 77 African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group  states, on their way to sign the Cotonou Agreement, the new trade and aid  agreement that will govern relations between the two groups for the next 20  years.  It was a year and a half in the making and is expected to take 15 to 18  months for the new agreement to be ratified by all the partner countries. \

 "There is an African proverb which says that the new plant grows in old  soil," Mathieu Kirekou, the 67-year-old president of Benin, said in a  thundering voice full of emotion, by way of paying homage to those who had  done the work that led to the new accord and to those who would seek to  implement it.   "We must all stand together. The messenger has come to give you good  news," he said amidst cheers of delight.

   The Agreement promises to ensure sustainable development "with a human  face - and human beings must be the beneficiaries" of the accord, said  Kirekou, noting that it had the eradication of poverty as its  "fundamental pillar."   Anciet Georges Dologuele, President of the ACP Council of Ministers and  prime minister of the Central African Republic, said the Agreement comes at  a time of great economic and commercial integration and important changes  and interventions in recent years on the international scene.

  "In effect, the objective of the Cotonou Agreement is to give the  countries of the ACP the means to relieve the negative effects of  globalisation and allow them to adapt to the new requirements of  international commerce and to strengthen their capacity to attract the  necessary investment necessary for  production and greater volumes and therefore be more competitive," he said.  

The current European Development Fund (2000-2007), the mechanism through  which the Commission disburses aid to ACP states, was set at 13.5 billion  euros.   In real terms, the aid volume will be three percent less than the  previous fund, a fact which doesn't sit well with ACP delegates.

"It is clear that to truly achieve the eradication of poverty, the  mobilisation of adequate financial measures is dispensable," said  Dologuele, yet "a number of ACP countries are being crushed by a debt burden  that undermines all of their efforts towards development.

 "Certainly the European Union does not remain insensitive to modern  times, but there is still much to do and I would like here on this occasion  that this ceremony offers to launch a solemn appeal to the international  community to finally ensure that the question of development is not  discounted," he said.

 Poul Nielson, the EU Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian Aid,  told the audience that the signing of the new Agreement clearly demonstrated  that "in a globalised world there is still room for a true and deep  relationship between the North and the South.   Under the previous accord, the Lome Convention, trade co-operation  between the two groups largely took the form of preferential tariffs.   In future, economic and trade co-operation will consist of a more  comprehensive set of arrangements, noted Nielson.   Elaborating the framework agreement between the two groups of countries  "with a view to addressing together major challenges such as poverty,  conflicts and wars, environmental and technological marginalisation, was not  an easy task," he said.

  "The new process approach aiming at establishing new trading  arrangements is crucial to improving the ACP countries' capacity to trade and to attract international private investment.   "It will be accompanied by appropriate support with a view to easing the  transition and to prepare for a more dynamic and equitable participation in  the international economic system," said Nielson.

 Although the signing ceremony was largely a celebration, with a generous  display of dance and song by the different peoples of Benin in traditional  dress, the difficulty of the task that lay ahead - the reduction and  eventual eradication of poverty - was clearly spelt out.

 Luis Amado, the Portuguese minister for development, whose country holds  the rotating EU Presidency, until it passes to France on July 1, also noted  that globalisation, "by increasing interdependence, offers new opportunities  for trade, investment and access to knowledge, but it also brings the risk of accentuating inequalities and of  marginalising countries which are unable to seize these opportunities”. 

 The economic situation in many ACP states has deteriorated over the past  few years and poverty has increased, he said, "which goes a long way to  explaining the increasing number of armed conflicts and emergencies,  particularly in Africa."

  From 1975 to 2000, almost 30 billion euros was committed to the ACP  states under Lome I -IV Conventions. Despite that investment, 39 of the now  77 ACP states still belong to the group of least developed countries.

 The ACP group includes over 75 percent of the world's least developed  countries (LDCs).   The new Agreement leaves room for the development of additional  reference texts and annexes that further define issues relating to more  specific policies, strategies and implementation of the accord, noted  Eurostep, a European network of 22 development organisations, in welcoming  the successor to the Lome Convention. However, the organisation notes that  the signatories still need to devise specific mechanisms and strategies for  its implementation.   In the 1990s, the EU executive commission became the world's fifth  largest donor of development aid. Together with aid from its 15 member  states, the EU provides more than 50 percent of all aid going to ACP  countries. 

 

 

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