Chile’s
ex-chief negotiator drops a bombshell on TPPA
Sunday,
2 June 2013, 5:06 pm
Press
Release: Professor Jane Kelsey
2
June 2013
In
a dramatic public statement, Chile’s former chief negotiator for
the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement (TPPA) Rodrigo Contreras has
urged fellow Latin American countries to work together to defend
their interests against the demands of rich countries in the talks.
Contreras
warned that unless they held back those demands the TPPA will become
‘a threat for our countries: it will restrict our options for
development in health and education, in biological and cultural
diversity, and in the design of public policies and the
transformation of our economies’.
It
will also provoke a backlash from Latin America’s increasingly
active social movements.
The
warning came in an opinion piece in the 16 May edition of Peru’s
Spanish language weekly Caretas, at the start of the most recent
negotiating round in Peru.*
Contreras
stood down from the role in February 2013. Informed bloggers note
‘It’s widely believed that he left his post voluntarily. He’s
held in high esteem not just in Chile but among his fellow trade
negotiators. His departure left people on the trade beat scratching
their heads. It now appears probable that the reason for his
resignation was that he saw where the TPP was likely to go and didn’t
want his name attached to it.’
‘Chile’s
former chief negotiator has dropped a bombshell on the talks’, said
Professor Jane Kelsey who is a critic of the negotiations.
‘While
his concerns are targeted at the poorer countries at the TPPA table,
the risks are essentially the same for New Zealand’ Professor
Kelsey observed.
‘Here
is an insider who knows the texts. Rodrigo Contreras has sat in the
negotiating room for several years and tried to get the US and others
to back off their most damaging demands. He now believes the current
direction of the TPPA poses a threat to his country’s economic and
social development’.
‘The
evidence continues to mount against this agreement every day. New
Zealand cannot continue to negotiate the TPPA under the shroud of
secrecy. With many chapters nearing closure, it is way past the time
to release what is on the table so we can evaluate and debate its
implications’, Kelsey said.
*For
an English translation see: The
New Chessboard – English Translation of Rodrigo Contreras Article
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