Yesterday I went to a public meeting that served up as a lead-up to a series of actions against the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) around the country on Saturday.
There were four speakers talking about different aspects of the TPPA - investment; Information Technology and copyright; and medicines - as well as Prof Jane Kelsey, professor of law at Auckland University, who has done most of the research connected with the movement against the TPPA.
What I came to understand from listening to the speakers was that, while people in the US are primarily concerned with Congress fast tracking the TPP, the main concern for countries like New Zealand are:
1. The inclusion of investor-state dispute settlement – ISDS – in free trade and investment treaties which gives foreign investors the right to sue governments in secretive offshore tribunals of dubious legal legitimacy when new laws or policies seriously affect the investor’s value or future profits.
2. "Certification" - which allows the United States alone to determine what a country's obligations are and whether they are meeting them and to use blackmail and bribing countries alternately.
The implications for smaller countries is that US corporations can dictate, through their government their wishlist, whether it be refusing to giving countries resitution for oil spills, insisting on the removal of "barriers" such as health, environmenal or labour legislation, insisting that countries use drug companies use their expensive medicine rather than cheaper alternatives, or imposing the likes of copyright.
This is a totally one-way street,where all the advantages accrue to US corporations and not the other way round.
For some very minor benefits for NZ agriculture our government is selling the whole country to US corporations.
The United States as a world power and its economy is in terminal decline and it is using its muscle and where necessary, its military superiority to extend its own life by consuming the economies of smaller, less powerful nations.
The only way it can maintain its own existence for the timebeing is to turn the world into slaves, its erstwhile allies into vassals , and its own 99 per cent into virtual serfs.
This was made clear to me by the article by the Russian, Alexander Sobyanin, the sacrifice of Nemtsov and the US takeover of the EU (TTIP) and Japan (TTP) which joined all the dots quite well.
My own personal position is, on this, that we must write letters, or blogs, march and demonstrate - not because we are going to win but because, in the words of Chris Hedges protest is a moral imperative . We cannot do otherwise because to stay silent in the face of Evil is an unacceptable option.
So please, get out and march against this monstrous agreement - do what you humanly can in conjunction with (hopefully) many others.
For details on actions in a centre near you GO HERE
Below are some articles which give more detail on what the TPPA is about.
Two things you can do to stop the TPPA
We
are at the stage where complacency, saturation or boredom plays
directly into the hands of the government, who have deliberately kept
the TPPA out of the spotlight. Editors are turning down stories
saying ‘there’s nothing new’. Once the TPPA is off the radar,
the government is home and hosed
By
Prof Jane Kelsey
16
February, 2015
If you were one of the 10,000 plus Kiwis
who joined the national day of action against the Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement (TPPA) last November, we need you to join us
again on Saturday 7 March – and bring 5 new mates along – to tell
the government: “TPPA: No Deal!” At least 16 different parts of
the country have so far put their hands up to organise some action.
That’s what democracy looks like!
I
can hear some of you sighing ‘oh, not again’. Believe me, there
is no one who would rather stay home on 7 March and weed the garden
or go for a picnic at the beach than me. But we are at the stage
where complacency, saturation or boredom plays directly into the
hands of the government, who have deliberately kept the TPPA out of
the spotlight. Editors are turning down stories saying ‘there’s
nothing new’. Once the TPPA is off the radar, the government is
home and hosed.
The
mobilisation on 7 March is not just a photo op – although there
will be some great street theatre. It is make or break time for the
TPPA and we need to inject a real sense of urgency into the campaign.
Rhetoric about the ‘end game’ has been around for several years.
This time is it true. Obama desperately wants to get the deal through
as part of his legacy. For that to happen, people working the math in
Washington say he needs a deal signed in May. Obama’s team is
planning how to short-circuit the formal steps, especially in the US
Congress, to make his legacy possible.
That
timeframe puts all the other countries under extreme pressure to cave
on remaining issues. It was clear from talking to officials in New
York in January at the last secret squirrel round of talks that the
technical negotiations are now basically over, aside from one more
meeting for a small number of groups. We are now in the political
zone. The current plan is for Ministers to meet in mid-March to
conclude a deal, and have a formal signing probably sometime in May.
In
an op-ed in the Herald on 6th February I explained why the elusive
deal between Japan and the US is still the biggest barrier – and
how left field demands from Congress for rules on ‘currency
manipulation’, combined with the US blackmail process known as
‘certification’, are raising the political stakes in Japan even
further. But we can’t simply assume that will save us.
Three
months of intensive activity can stop the TPPA or at least put it
into the deep freeze. Here is one thing you can do, in addition to
joining the nationwide day of action on 7 March.
The
inclusion of investor-state dispute settlement – ISDS – in free
trade and investment treaties gives foreign investors the right to
sue the government in secretive offshore tribunals of dubious legal
legitimacy when new laws or policies seriously affect the investor’s
value or future profits. They can claim hundreds of millions or even
billions of dollars, with the aim of getting governments to back off
or forcing them to reverse the policy or fork out taxpayer money to
foreign corporations. Think plain packaging tobacco.
Fortunately,
we have signed very few of these agreements. The TPPA would be the
granddaddy of them all, because it gives US TNCs a license to sue.
The
government knows the sun is setting on these controversial powers
internationally, and there is a groundswell of opinion against ISDS
within New Zealand. But that has not stopped it from signing us up to
another treaty that gives those powers to foreign investors from
South Korea.
The
New Zealand Korea Free Trade Agreement will be tabled in House very
soon. It will go to a select committee for a Clayton’s hearing
where neither the committee nor Parliament can make any change.
Usually they hear from a handful of industry cheerleaders and a
couple of critical academics and unionists, and the treaty becomes a
done deal.
We
want the select commute deluged with submissions from Kiwis from all
walks of life who demand an end to ISDS in any New Zealand treaty.
The select committee process is incredibly short, so there may only
be a week to do this. To help people, the ItsOurFuture website will
have a dedicated page with a standard form submission, as well as
information for people wanting to tailor their own.
As
many unions, health professionals, local councils, iwi, environment
groups, local councils, mining campaigners, also need to highlight
the risks to their constituency and insist that they want to appear
before the committee. The web-based resources will be available later
this week for people who want to prepare in advance. As soon the
treaty reaches Parliament, the alarm bells will sound.
Hopefully,
there will also be a members’ bill presented in the House around
the same time calling for no ISDS in any future agreements, which can
bring further pressure to bear on the issue.
The
grand plan is to reinforce those submissions with adverts in the
Auckland and Wellington papers on the morning of 7 March that is
crowd-funded so people can put themselves on record as opposing ISDS
in the TPPA or any other free trade and investment deal.
Jane Kelsey: Trade deal hands US power to rewrite NZ laws
"Certification"
seems a benign enough word. But it hides an extraordinary power that
the United States is expected to assert if the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) is concluded.
12
August, 2014
The
US basically claims the right to decide what a country's obligations
are under a trade and investment agreement. It then refuses to bring
the agreement into force in relation to the other country until that
government has changed its laws, regulations and administrative
processes to fit the US expectation of what is needed to comply. This
certification process can run on for years.
Communications
from the US Congress and the US Trade Representative (USTR) suggest
their prime targets for New Zealand would be our copyright and patent
laws, the foreign investment vetting regime, the procedures by which
Pharmac operates, and Fonterra's "anti-competitive monopoly".
How
does certification work? US officials transmit the list of the
changes to the other country's domestic laws and regulations that
they require before the US allow the pact to go into force.
The
officials maintain pressure on the government of the other country
until they are satisfied.
The
certification requirement has existed since the 1980s, but US
politicians and corporates were unhappy over deals with Chile and
Australia, so there has been more focus in recent years on ensuring
their demands are met before the agreement comes into force.
Moves
are already under way to apply certification to the TPP. In January,
the Bipartisan Trade Priorities Act of 2014 was introduced to
Congress to establish a new grant of fast-track authority for the
TPP. Fast tracking would mean Congress votes yes or no to the entire
agreement (although that is not watertight). The bill contains new
obligations on the USTR to consult Congress about whether
certification requirements have been met.
In
practice, certification has seen US officials become directly
involved in drafting another country's relevant laws and regulations
to ensure they satisfy US demands. This includes reviewing, amending
and approving proposed laws before they are presented to the other
country's legislature. The USTR even demanded that Guatemala
implement new pharmaceutical laws that were not in the formal text,
and which the government had strenuously resisted during
negotiations.
Communications
within the Office of the USTR over certification of the Peru US Free
Trade Agreement were secured under the US Freedom of Information Act.
They reveal interference in Peru's legislative and democratic
processes. One email said: "We have to redraft the regs and the
law - Peru needs to accept them without changes". Another said,
" If the Peruvians accept our language as we [USTR] propose it
we still have the possibility of wrapping everything up the week of
November 10. If the Peruvians try to negotiate then all bets are
off".
Similar
communications might never be released under New Zealand's Official
Information Act, because they involve information entrusted to the
Government in confidence from another government. In other words, New
Zealanders, including MPs, might never know the US was involved in
writing our laws and demanding the right to sign them off before
Parliament gets to see them.
Everyone
knows the US is driving the TPP. The demands made on behalf of US
corporations have dominated negotiations. US officials now chair many
of the controversial negotiating groups. The US has even bankrolled
ministers' and officials' meetings in other countries.
Certification
takes US control to a whole new level.
A
final text would not be final until the US had overseen the rewriting
of our laws to its satisfaction - "our version of the TPP, or no
deal at all".
Jane
Kelsey is a law professor at the University of Auckland.
The TPPA’s Dirty Little Secret: How US could write NZ’s Laws
Wednesday,
13 August 2014, 9:47 am
Press Release: Professor Jane Kelsey
Press Release: Professor Jane Kelsey
A
new website launched today (http://tppnocertification.org/)
has exposed what University of Auckland law professor Jane Kelsey
calls ‘the dirty little secret of the TPPA’.
‘Behind
the seemingly benign term “certification” hides an extraordinary
power that the US is expected to assert if the Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement (TPPA) is concluded’.
‘Effectively,
the US claims the right to decide what a country’s obligations are
under a trade and investment agreement and refuses to bring the
agreement into force in relation to that country until it has changed
its laws, regulations and administrative processes to fit the US
interpretation’, Professor Kelsey explained.
Statements
from members of US Congress and the US Trade Representative (USTR)
suggest prime targets for New Zealand would be our copyright and
patent laws, the foreign investment vetting regime, the procedures by
which Pharmac operates, and Fonterra’s ‘anti-competitive
monopoly’.
‘The
other eleven governments are aware of the certification process and
many are concerned. But no one has told the public how the US can
effectively redraft our laws.’
Professor
Kelsey has co-authored a memorandum that draws on the experience of
countries that have been subjected to the US certification process in
recent years.
It
reveals how US officials have been directly involved in drafting
other countries’ relevant laws and regulations to ensure they
satisfy US demands. This includes reviewing, amending and approving
proposed laws before they are presented to the other country’s
legislature. The USTR even demanded that Guatemala implement new
pharmaceutical laws that were not in the formal text, and which the
government had strenuously resisted during the negotiations.
Communications
within the Office of the USTR on the Peru US Free Trade Agreement
were secured under the US Freedom of Information Act and show how
brutal the US can be: ‘We [USTR] have to redraft the regs and the
law – Peru needs to accept them without changes’.
Similar
communications might never be released under New Zealand’s Official
Information Act, because they involveinformation entrusted to the
government in confidence from another government.
‘In
other words New Zealanders, including MPs, might never know that the
US was involved in writing our laws and demanding the right to sign
them off even before Parliament gets to see them’, Professor Kelsey
warned.
‘Everyone
knows the US is driving the TPPA. But agreeing to a final text, in
the knowledge that the US will then play the certification card,
would mean conceding the right of US officials to oversee the making
of New Zealand’s laws and regulations.’
For more information on certification GO HERE
On 15 January 2014, WikiLeaks released the secret draft text for the entire TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership) Environment Chapter and the corresponding Chairs' Report.
To
read the Wikileaks report GO
HERE
This is in response to the government contention that the TPPA has to be negotiated in secret for it to work.
TPPA
secret while EU releases TTIP documents
12
February 2015
Groser
needs to explain why NZ must keep TPPA secret while EU releases TTIP
documents
‘Trade
minister Tim Groser has repeatedly claimed that negotiations for
agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) are
never conducted in daylight. That is simply not true.’
‘There
are many such instances, including the Anti-counterfeiting Trade
Agreement (ACTA) that involved six of the TPPA parties,[1] where
draft negotiating texts and other documents have been released. He
has ignored the inconvenient truth and continued to assert his
position as fact’, says University of Auckland Professor Jane
Kelsey.
‘The
European Commission (EC) has now conclusively just put the lie to
such claims’.
Professor
Kelsey has just published two papers analysing recent developments in
the negotiations between the European Union and the US called the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) which parallel
those for the TPPA.
One
contrasts the obsessive secrecy that continues to envelope the TPPA
with the inquiry by the EU Ombudsman into transparency and public
access to TTIP documents[2] and the EC’s subsequent decision to
release a raft of its own negotiating documents with.[3] The second
outlines the Ombudsman’s reports and the EC’s responses. [4]
The
European Ombudsman was forthright. Old approaches of confidentiality
and limited public participation are ‘ill-equipped to generate
legitimacy’ for such ambitious agreements. ‘Given the potential
impact of TTIP on the lives of citizens, key documents have to be
published’.
Moreover,
‘it is vital that the Commission inform the US of the importance of
making, in particular, common negotiating texts available to the EU
public before the TTIP agreement is finalised [to] allow for timely
feedback to negotiators in relation to sections of the agreement that
pose particular problems. … [I]t is preferable to learn of such
problems sooner rather than later.”(original emphasis)
The
fact the US might object to release of the documents does not mean
they should be withheld on the grounds of protecting ‘international
relations’ (similar wording exists in the NZ Official Information
Act).
Further,
confidentiality agreements between parties would not be conclusive
grounds for withholding documents. There must be convincing grounds
for withholding any content at the particular time, judged on a
document-by-document basis.
While
the EC did not go as far as the Ombudsman recommended, it has
published negotiating texts it has tabled in the negotiations and
committed to releasing the final version of TTIP well before it is
signed to enable debate.
Both
papers were tabled at the Foreign Affairs Defence and Trade Committee
this morning. The committee was finally hearing a petition from 16
groups that has been presented to the House in 2011, calling for full
disclosure of TPPA documentation.
‘The
call for release of negotiating documents made in 2011 is even more
pressing now, as the TPPA parties aim to make their final decisions
at a ministerial meeting in mid-March, dated and venue unknown.’
Professor
Kelsey has made an Official Information Act request for similar
documents from New Zealand with a view to testing the legal basis on
which the government believes it can withhold all TPPA-related
documents, including even the dates and venues of forthcoming
meetings.
The
TPPA parties claim they are bound by a strict confidentiality
agreement, effectively tying their own hands. But Professor Kelsey
notes that is not a final impediment.
‘When
the TPPA ministers meet in March, if not before, they must unwind
this shroud of secrecy they have wound around their activities - just
as many of them did as parties to the ACTA negotiations in 2013.’
________________________________________
[1]
Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore and US.
[2]
Decision of the European Ombudsman closing her own-initiative inquiry
OI/10/2014/RA Concerning the European Commission, 6 January 2015,
http://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/cases/decision.faces/en/58668/html.bookmark
[3]
Jane Kelsey, ‘The Ombudsman’s Inquiry into Transparency and
Public Participation in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership’, 1 February 2014
http://www.itsourfuture.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/THE-EU-OMBUDSMAN¹S-INQUIRY-INTO.pdf
[4]
Jane Kelsey, ‘If the EU can release TTIP negotiating documents, the
TPPA countries can do the same’, 1 February 2014
http://www.itsourfuture.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/TTIP-v-TPPA.pdf
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