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TOWARDS A STRATEGY FOR WTO MINISTERIAL IN HONG KONG
ASIA MEETING IN COLOMBO JUNE 6TH-7TH 2005

Dear Friends,

We would like to invite you to an Asia strategy meeting of
peoples movements, mass organizations, networks, NGOs and
activists to build a collective strategy to counter the
ongoing negotiations in the World Trade Organisation (WTO)
and the 6th WTO Ministerial Meeting. The meeting will be
held in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on June 6-7, 2005.

As many of you know, the WTO will hold its 6th Ministerial
Meeting in Hong Kong from December 13th-18th 2005. This
Ministerial Meeting will be a crucial one since the trade
majors in the WTO hope to conclude the Doha Round of
negotiations (also called the Doha Development Agenda)
during this meeting.

The proposed dates of the strategy meeting are intended to
take advantage of the fact that an Asia consultation meeting
on the World Social Forum (WSF) is already scheduled for
June 4-5 in Colombo.  Having the two meetings back-to-back
in the same location will
save travel time and resources for many of us. However, the
strategy meeting on the WTO is a separate one and not linked
in any substantive manner to the WSF
meeting.

ORGANISING TOWARDS THE HONG KONG MINISTERIAL

The first international meeting in Asia in 2005 on the WTO
was held in Hong Kong
from February 26-27..  Convened by the Hong Kong PeoplesÃââ
Alliance on WTO (HKPA), the meeting was attended by 250
participants from 110 organizations, movements, activists
and NGOs from 23 countries around the world, with most
participants coming from Asia. The HKPA is a network of
grass-root organizations, which include trade unions,
community labour groups, organisations that represent
workers, migrant workers, students, women, the church, human
rights activists and researchers, and regional organisations
based in Hong Kong.  In the February meeting, Working Groups
were established to draw a wide representation of movements,
organisations and networks into the planning process towards
the Hong Kong Ministerial Meeting.

At the same time, peoplesÃââ movements, networks and
organizations in different countries in Asia have also
started to hold meetings to develop collaborative strategies
and action plans to put pressure on the WTO negotiations to
ensure that the Hong Kong Ministerial Meeting does not echo
the hegemonic interests of the developed countries led by
the US and the EU.  In March, farmers groups from all over
India mobilized in New Delhi to protest the G 20 and G 33
meetings. It is important that we build on and strengthen
all these processes that have already been initiated, and it
is this spirit that we now call for a regional strategy
meeting in Colombo.

THE COLOMBO MEETING

The strategy meeting is being organised to accelerate the
momentum generated in various national and regional
meetings, and to provide a space for movements and groups
from across Asia to come together, plan local, national and
regional actions on WTO negotiations, and strengthen
alliances in order to build a cohesive, region-wide strategy
to impact on the Hong Kong Ministerial Meeting.

Colombo was selected as a location for this meeting since
Sri Lanka is a site of vibrant struggles against neo-liberal
policies and corporate led globalisation. In the recent
past, peoplesÃââ movements and organizations have come
together and organised against the WTO as well as against
the policies of International Financial Institutions (IFIs)
such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, that
have led to deepening economic, social and environmental
crises in the country.  In the post-Tsunami rehabilitation
phase, backed by the IFIs and bilateral donors, the Sri
Lankan Government has more or less handed over control of
the rebuilding process to vested corporate interests.  This
is being resisted strongly by the peoplesÃââ movement
alliances in Sri Lanka, and we hope that this meeting will
contribute in a small but significant way to strengthening
their struggles.

URGENCY OF STOPPING THE WTO CORPORATE AGENDA

There is a lot at stake for everyone with the current WTO
negotiations and
upcoming Ministerial Meeting in Hong Kong. If the major
trading powers succeed in concluding the WTO Doha
Development Agenda with firm commitments on market access,
domestic supports and regulations, and subsidies in the
areas of
agriculture, industry and services, the process of global
trade liberalisation will be speeded up and the ambit of the
WTO will be further expanded into spheres of
domestic/national policy and public procurement of goods and
services. Even
the TRIPS agreement, over which there have been significant
disagreements, is now threatening to proceed at the benefit
of Big Pharma and transnational corporations.

The urgency also lies in the fact that while the Ministerial
Meeting is important in itself, trends over the past year
show that many of the commitments that will be sealed in
Hong Kong will likely be negotiated and finalised elsewhere,
and that the Hong Kong Ministerial might well be an event to
put a ÃâÅfinal stampÃâ on negotiations conducted in other fora
such as mini-ministerial meetings, the OECD and G-8
meetings, the ongoing negotiations in Geneva among the
different negotiating committees, and the General Council
Meetings in Geneva.

The General Council Meeting in Geneva in July 2004 resulted
in a reversal of victories that peoplesÃââ movements won in
Cancun in September 2003, when negotiations collapsed in the
Ministerial Meeting.  The Framework for Negotiations or the
July Framework as it is now called is a definite step
backwards for the interests of workers, farmers, fishers,
and the general public in developing countries.

Although strong developing country groupings such as the G-
20, G-33 and
G-90 have attempted to articulate positions that favour
their respective developmental interests, these groupings
are vulnerable to arm-twisting tactics by developed
countries. Also, negotiations in all these fora are
conducted in relative secrecy and outside of public scrutiny
with little or no input from the constituencies who would be
most impacted by
them.

In addition, there has been a surge of bilateral and
plurilateral trade agreements between the US, EU and
specific developing countries in Asia, Africa and the
Caribbean, which push trade and investment liberalization
commitments even beyond what are currently being negotiated
in the WTO.

HOW TO GET INVOLVED

In the final analysis the WTO continues to be an instrument
to advance the financial and economic interests of rich
countries and their corporations. Many movements and
organizations across the world have committed to work
together to put pressure on the Ministerial Meeting in Hong
Kong and organize actions during the various
mini-ministerials, General Council meetings, and in national
arenas. These actions, however, will only be effective if
linked with many more movements, organizations, unions and
activists around Asia. We request you to seriously consider
participating in this strategy meeting, especially given the
rapid pace at which negotiations are proceeding on the
various WTO agreements. Information about the venue of the
meeting and a draft programme will be circulated in the
coming weeks.

Please let us know of your interest to attend this meeting
by writing to MONLAR at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] at your earliest
Contact details:
Movement for National Land and Agricultural Reform (MONLAR)
No: 1151/58A, 4th Lane,  Kotte Road, Rajagiriya, Sri Lanka.
Tel:Fax: (+94) 11 4407663 Tel: (+94) 11 2865534
Web: www.geocities.com/monlarslk

We look forward to seeing you in Colombo on June 6-7.

In solidarity,

Alliance for the Protection of National Resources and Human
Rights., Srilanka;
National Fisheries Solidarity, Srilanka; The Hong Kong
PeoplesÃââ Alliance on WTO;
La Via Campesina, South Asia; The National Working Group on
Patents, India;
ActionAid International-Asia; Focus on the Global South,
India; Plantation Sector Social Forum, Srilanka; WomenÃââs
Action for Social Justice, Srilanka.

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