Conference proceedings
Following the formal opening session, the Joint Assembly
reconvened on the following day to debate a number of important issues including
the service sector, the situation in Southern Africa, the effects of the Gulf
crisis, debt and the AIDS problem.
The proceedings began with what was supposed to be a discussion
of the introductory report by Mr Agne (Senegal) entitled Services - a new
line of development. Mr Agne, who spoke first, gave a lucid expose of the
issues although he did take a somewhat different line from President Museveni.
He did not raise the possibility of agricultural liberalisation as some form of
quid pro quo for agreement on services, but argued instead for a progressive
liberalisation of the latter which took into account the factor of development
in the ACPs. In an age of high technology, he noted, services
become a factor of production which is equal in importance to labour and
capital. He pointed out that services were chronically underdeveloped in
most ACP States and said that the challenge was to design a service policy to
tackle this problem.
Mr Agne was also critical of the United States which, he
claimed, bad refused to include air and maritime transport in the GATT
negotiations and had insisted that the most-favoured nation clause should not
automatically be applied to the service sector.
Unfortunately, the debate which followed did little justice to
Mr Agnes hard work. Although a number of ACP representatives and MEPs
spoke, there was a tendency to take the eye off the ball with
contributions which had little to do with the subject matter under discussion. A
precedent was set by Georges Wohlfart, President in Office of the EC Council who
used the opportunity to give a more general overview of Community development
policy.
Report from EC Council
He began by reassuring ACP countries that the Community would
maintain and deepen its relations with its partners of the South. He
spoke in positive terms about the implementation of LomV but made no
commitment on the issue of debt, saying simply that the Council was examining
the current Commission proposals on debt relief. On the GATT negotiations, Mr
Wohlfart spoke of a global approach based on balanced concessions in all
sectors. Perhaps not surprisingly, he chose not to indicate how far such
balanced concessions in the area of farm products would respond to
the complaint voiced by President Museveni on the previous day.
As regards sanctions and South Africa, the position of the
Council clearly differs from that of the ANC and many ACP States. Mr Wohlfart
indicated that the changes taking place in South Africa, notably the proposed
repeal of various apartheid laws and other restrictive measures, was
being met with an easing of sanctions and in this connection, the Council had
lifted its ban on new investments in the country.
Avoid fatalism
For the European Commission, Vice-President Manuel Marin
commended LomV as providing a firm framework of solidarity for
Community-ACP relations which will endure throughout the nineties, whatever the
upheavals or unexpected events on the international scene. Referring to
major current events, including the Gulf crisis, the ECs internal market
and the opening up of Eastern Europe, Mr Marin cautioned against adopting a
fatalistic and thoroughly negative attitude. We must, at all costs,
he argued, prevent the debate over the future of the ACP countries from
degenerating into a sterile ideological confrontation.
In respect of the implementation of LomV, Mr Marin revealed
that preprogramming was well under way, the EDF Committee having already
approved plans from 52 of the ACP countries. The position regarding
ratifications was less satisfactory. In order to enter into force, the
Convention must be ratified by all of the EC Member States and by at least two
thirds of the ACPs. With some 40 ratifications, the ACPs are close to- reaching
the necessary figure but only three EC countries had ratified so far. Mr Marin
reiterated his support of the Joint Assemblys call for national
governments and parliaments to speed up the process.
Services debate goes off the rails
By this stage in the proceedings, it was clear that the services
debate had implicitly been suspended, but its resumption brought little
encouragement for those seeking enlightenment on the subject. Despite relevant
interventions from Peter Pooley of the EC Commission and the Dutch MEP, Maartje
Van Putten, the discussion deviated alarmingly to include an announcement about
emergency aid to Sudan, a warning about the consequences of population growth,
an expression of concern about the low rate of project implementation under LomII and a suggestion for the utilisation of counterpart funds. It was billed as
a debate on the general report but Mr Agne must have been left
wishing for a little more specificity.
Southern Africa
Thereafter, the focus was mercifully restored with a lively
discussion on the situation in South Africa and the Southern Africa region.
There was considerable interest, and not a little alarm, expressed about the
Commissions decision to open a technical office in Pretoria
The representative of Zambia reflected the prevailing mood in welcoming the
establishment of a Commission presence in South Africa but demanding that it
should be in Johannesburg and not Pretoria lest it be seen as having a
diplomatic function. The Commission has repeatedly stressed that the new office
is not diplomatic in nature, and that it in no way implies acceptance or
approval of the apartheid system. Indeed, one of the main functions of the
office will be to coordinate Community programmes designed to assist the victims
of apartheid.
Gulf crisis
In the debate concerning the consequences of the Gulf crisis for
ACP countries, the view that the effects would be devastating
continued to have some currency, despite the stubborn refusal of the oil price
to rise in line with the early apocalyptic predictions. The prevailing view,
however, was reflected in the balance of the discussion between the economic and
political implications, with considerable emphasis on the latter.
The representative of Djibouti whose country has directly
suffered the economic fallout of the crisis, spoke of serious losses in the
aviation sector and pressures arising out of the return of 5000 expatriate
workers from the Gulf region. We have retreated five centuries into the
past, he declared - this was a war to destroy, not to defend.
Other speakers echoed this sentiment. David Morris (UK) said the conflict was
both immoral and pointless and he accused the United States and Great Britain of
having led the world to war. Henri Saby, who is President of the European
Parliaments Development Committee gave a less emotional assessment and
suggested that the Gulf crisis could help the emergence of a new world order
founded on solidarity and justice. Marie-Christine Aulas (France)
strongly disputed this view, arguing that there had been a flagrant distortion
of international law and the outcome was, in effect a return to an old
order.
Although the economic consequences of the conflict are expected
to be less catastrophic than originally feared, a number of speakers focused on
the nonetheless serious impact likely to be felt by the ACPs. Developing
countries have already experienced losses in the tourism sector and airlines are
known to be under pressure. These were themes developed by Frans-Xavier de
Donnea (Belgium), who also looked at the long-term problems of energy supply,
high interest rates and the costs of reconstruction. Commissioner Marin took a
similar line in warning that special attention would have to be given to the
indirect repercussions of the crisis on the most vulnerable economies.
Debt crisis
The following morning saw a debate on the debt crisis facing the
ACPs and Mr Marin again took the floor to explain the details of the
Commissions proposal for debt relief. He acknowledged that the plans could
not resolve the problem of bilateral debt contracted by the ACPs but he saw it
as an important political gesture reaffirming the Communitys solidarity
with its developing country partners.
Maartje Van Putten (Netherlands) pointed out that the Commission
proposal involved only 2% of the ACPs total debts and called on the
Council, not only to adopt the measure but also to develop a common strategy
with the EC Member States for debt cancellation. The Nigerian representative
gave a graphic example of the problems facing the ACPs, in noting that whilst
ten years ago, it took eight pounds of coffee to buy a wristwatch, it now took
15.
Other speakers calling for debt alleviation and cancellation
included Maxime Verhagen (Netherlands), Brigitte Ernst de la Graete (Belgium),
Christopher Jackson (UK) and the representatives of Zambia, Guyana and Cameroon.
AIDS crisis
The afternoon session was devoted to a public session on AIDS,
which was addressed by a number of invited experts. The Ugandan Minister for
Economic Development and Planning, Mr Rukikaire gave a frank assessment of the
scale of the problem in his own country indicating that an estimated 1.3
million people were infected by the HIV virus (6% of the population). He said
that since 1986, the Government had conducted a campaign, in liaison with the
World Health Organisation. This was aimed at educating the people about the
problem, controlling blood banks, developing research and ensuring that people
who had been infected did not become marginalised. The Director of the Ugandan
AIDS Programme, Dr Namara complemented the Ministers contribution with
further detailed statistics.
Dr Aby-Sy of the WHO supplied a global assessment of the problem
and outlined his Organisations strategy for dealing with it. He stressed
the importance of providing the ACP countries with the means to develop
appropriate policies which would be decided centrally but managed locally.
Dr Fransens, Director of the EC AIDS Task Force, described the
approach of the European Commission which had allocated ECU 39 million to the
battle against AIDS in the ACPs. Since 1990, the Commission had implemented 61
programmes designed mainly to prevent the transmission of the disease by sexual
means, or to establish safe are, rangements for blood transfusion.
Representatives who spoke in the subsequent debate expressed
their gratitude to the expert speakers for their sobering and honest assessment
of the AIDS epidemic. There was a general consensus that to discriminate against
HIV sufferers was unacceptable and various calls were made to devote more
resources to information and health infrastructures. The focus of this
particular discussion was not on motions or amendments, but on learning more
about the subject so that informed policymaking can take place in the future.
Few were left in any doubt about the tragedy which AIDS has visited on the world
in general and the ACPs in particular but as evidence of the increasing
willingness to face up to the problem, the Joint Assemblys decision to
give AIDS a full hearing was the right one.
The final day of the Joint Assembly was devoted to a variety of
issues, including discussions on transport, intra-ACP trade and structural
adjustment. The members of a Joint Assembly mission which had visited Sudan
reported on the situation in that country and various procedural questions were
dealt with. The Assembly concluded with a lengthy voting session on a series of
resolutions relating to the main issues which had been discussed during the
week. The venue for the Autumn 1991 Joint Assembly was not decided definitely,
but it is likely to be in the Netherlands. In the meantime, delegates left for
home with a new respect for a renascent Uganda and an abiding memory of the
warmth and hospitality of its people.
Simon
HORNER