'Dairy
a sticking point in TPP negotiations'
Observers to
the Trans-Pacific Partnership talks say dairy is again one of the key
sticking points as negotiators try to seal the deal
5
October, 2015
A
ministerial media conference has been delayed
indefinitely after already being pushed back twice.
The
opening session of the ministerial talks in Atlanta. Photo: Twitter
/ @USTRspox
Trade
ministers, including New Zealand's Tim Groser, have been meeting for
the last five days in a bid to complete a 12-nation regional trade
zone that encompasses 40 percent of the global economy.
New
Zealand was insisting on better dairy access to American, Canadian
and Japanese markets.
Beef
and Lamb New Zealand's northern American regional manager Terry
Miekle was in Atlanta as the clock ticked down to a hoped-for deal.
He said the countdown was on and the pressure and nerves were high.
"When
you're coming down to the last hour and then the hour gets pushed out
by another couple of hours, the nerves tend to rise," Mr Miekle
said.
"But
we're in the stakeholder area, obviously we're not with the
negotiators, per se, they're a couple of levels up in the hotel as
are obviously the ministers, so we don't get a huge amount of contact
with our negotiators, in fact our negotiators have been working
around the clock for the last five, six, seven days. It's been a
phenomenal effort by all of them.
Mr
Miekle said the details of what's holding up an agreement were
unclear.
"It's
very difficult to determine exactly what's effectively the last item
standing, but all of the rumours circulating down the bottom of the
hallway here are certainly that dairy is one of, if not the last,
it's one of the last two - biologics and dairy. And my understanding
is our minister has been working furiously throughout the night on
this, as have others on the biologics issue."
Mr
Miekle says no details have been released, but he understands there
are no changes to the deals on New Zealand meat.
"We
believe we will be getting a tariff reduction over about 15 years
down to the vicinity of 9 to 10 percent and that's into the Japanese
market, now that's coming of a 38.5% current tariff, but also
importantly we're looking to get an open access into the US and
Canadian and into the Mexican markets."
To
hear Jane Kelsey on TPP negotiations
Elsewhere
Kim Dotcom’s case is being heard in a stacked court. Justice under this regime is impossible
Dotcom
lawyers say fair hearing is impossible
Lawyers for
Kim Dotcom and his co-accused are asking for their extradition
hearing to be halted, saying a fair hearing is impossible at the
moment.
5
October, 2015
Mr
Dotcom, Mathias Ortmann, Bram van der Kolk and Finn Batato face
extradition to the United States to face charges of copyright
violation, money-laundering and rackeetering related to their website
Megaupload.
The
men's lawyers are making applications to the court today for a stay
in proceedings. If a stay is granted, it would halt the case
temporarily or even permanently.
Mr
Ortmann and Mr van der Kolk's lawyer, Grant Illingworth, said a US
forfeiture order had prevented them from paying for expert witnesses
and legal advice anywhere outside New Zealand.
That
overrode Hong Kong and New Zealand courts allowing them to use frozen
funds to pay for their legal defence, Mr Illingworth said.
That
was preventing the men from getting the legal advice they needed on
American law to properly defend themselves, he said.
They
said that meant they can not present their defence properly and it
would be a breach of natural justice to continue the hearing.
The
order had also delayed their preparation for the case, Mr Illingworth
said.
Mr
Illingworth earlier got into a heated exchange with Judge Nevin
Dawson over the judge's own instructions to the court in a minute
issued last Friday.
Mr
Illingworth told Judge Dawson his meaning was not clear.
"Well,
that's what my memorandum says," Judge Dawson replied.
"No,
it's not what your memorandum says, sir," Mr Illingworth said.
The
exchange prompted Judge Dawson to adjourn the court so he could
decide whether Mr Illingworth could present the arguments he wanted
to.
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