-Caveat Lector-

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 Wednesday, May 5, 1999 Published at 21:53 GMT 22:53 UK
WTO in turmoil

WTO in turmoil
The battle for the leadership of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) is taking
new twists and turns, with each side calling on the other one to withdraw its
candidate.
The dispute has paralysed the organisation, which should devote most of its
time mediating and adjudicating in the world's numerous trade disputes.




One candidate is New Zealand's Mike Moore, and his supporters say that their
candidate has triumphed.

But the countries in favour of Thailand's Supachai Panitchpakdi insist that
the race is still open.

"Dr Supachai enjoys very extensive support in his bid to secure the
director-generalship," said a statement published on Wednesday and backed by
55 countries from Asia, Africa, Europe and Latin America.

They are especially furious that the chairman of the WTO's governing General
Council, Ali Mchumo of Tanzania, last week formally proposed to appoint Mr
Moore.

Mr Mchumo says that New Zealand's former prime minister enjoys a slight lead
of 62-59 among member states.

Dr Supachai's supporters dispute this.

"The chairman has no authority to exclude any candidate, or to declare that
any candidate is out of the race," said Kenya's ambassador Kipkorir Aly Rana,
speaking for the whole group.

And Japan's ambassador Nobutoshi Akao told a news conference that "it is very
obvious there is no consensus around Mr Moore", suggesting that it "would
only be fair to try to build one now around Dr Supachai."

Pause for reflection

There is no sign whatsoever that either side is prepared to compromise. What
remains of the WTO leadership has called for a "pause for reflection", and
diplomats said the organisation's council could be convened again on
Thursday.

If the dispute cannot be resolved - and at the moment there are no signs it
can - then a third candidate may have to be chosen.

The dispute cuts right through the East-West and North-South divide.

The US and many European nations support Michael Moore, while the Asian
trading block and the UK have come out in favour of the Thai candidate.

Mr Supachai said that American tactics had alienated many developing
countries.

"I was hoping the process would not polarise relations between the United
States and Asia. But in the heat of the race some strong statements have been
said," he told reporters in Geneva.

But US ambassador Rita Hayes indicated that the United States was prepared to
delay any decision until one candidate withdrew.

"It takes a while to form a consensus," she said.

Leaderless

The organisation, with 134 member countries, has been leaderless since last
Friday night, when the term of office for director-general Renato Ruggiero
expired.

The WTO has named David Hartridge, head of its services division, as acting
director, but only to handle routine matters.

The bitter row could not come at a worse time for the WTO - which is
struggling to resolve a series of trade disputes between the US and the
Europe.

Its future role of administering world trade has been thrown in doubt.

And preparations for the next round of world trade talks - due to start in
Seattle in November - have been put into jeopardy by the continuing
indecision.

Principles at stake

The dispute is not just about personalities.

The United States, under pressure from environmentalists and trade unions,
wants to widen the next round of trade talks to include discussion of labour
standards and pollution.

Developing countries fear that this could become an excuse to delay the
implementation of free trade agreements that would allow their goods greater
access to Western markets.

Mr Moore is believed to be more favourable to the US position on these
issues, while Mr Supachai favours the developing countries' views.




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Business Contents
London Shares
The Markets
The Economy
The Company File
Your Money
Foreign Exchange

The Economy Contents
Economy Reports
Interest Rates

Relevant Stories
Crunch time for WTO (04 May 99 | The Economy)
Thais 'disgusted' by block on Supachai (04 May 99 | The Economy)
WTO: Policing world trade (03 May 99 | The Economy)
WTO: A history of free trade (09 Jul 98 | Economy Reports)
WTO leadership battle escalates (02 May 99 | The Economy)
US on trade warpath (30 Apr 99 | The Economy)
New Atlantic trade war looms (25 Apr 99 | The Economy)
China to join WTO 'by November' (26 Apr 99 | The Economy)
World trade slumps (22 Apr 99 | The Economy)



Internet Links
World Trade Organisation
WTO in brief


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

In this section
Interest rates frozen
Bosses' big pay rise
Euro strengthens as rates are held
Emergency talks at WTO
EU fails to open up China
Service sector growing strongly
Russia hopeful on debt rescheduling
Retail gloom lifting
WTO in turmoil
Mortgages on the rise
UK manufacturing revival
One Europe, one stockmarket
IMF monitors for Nigeria





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