http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/12/21/mari-pangestu-nominated-replace-lamy-wto-chief.html


Mari Pangestu nominated to replace Lamy as WTO chief
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Headlines | Fri, December 21 2012, 11:12 AM 
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Paper Edition | Page: 1

(JP/R. Berto Wedhatama)Indonesia has entered the race for the leadership of the 
World Trade Organization (WTO), nominating former trade minister Mari Elka 
Pangestu to succeed Pascal Lamy when he steps down in August 2013, bringing a 
second woman and a third continent into the contest.

Mari is the third candidate to be nominated in as many days, following Ghana’s 
Alan Kyerematen and Costa Rica’s Anabel Gonzalez. All five directors general in 
the WTO’s 17-year history have been male, 
Reuters reported.

Her nomination also comes on the heels of Indonesia’s successful bid to host 
the WTO’s next biennial ministerial conference, which is set to take place in 
Bali in December 2013.

Mari, currently Indonesia’s tourism and creative economy minister, was a 
respected figure in the WTO during her seven-year stint as trade minister 
because of her strong stance on free trade. 

However, she was ousted from the position last year following a string of 
disagreements with colleagues at the Industry Ministry, the Agriculture 
Ministry and the Finance Ministry, who tried to prioritize domestic interests 
over free trade agreements.

Analysts agreed, saying that her trade policies had been way too open and 
liberal, with the 56-year-old economist was unsuccessful in plugging the influx 
of imported goods from Indonesia’s trading partners, especially China, 
eventually leading to her removal.

If Mari is named as the WTO’s new top official, she will have responsibility 
for policing trade ministers in the organization’s member countries, including 
Gita Wirjawan, her successor in the Trade Ministry who, since taking over 
Mari’s job in October 2011, has been building various forms of trade barrier to 
shield Indonesia from an influx of imported goods, worrying Indonesia’s trading 
partners.

Gita has been the subject of criticism from Turkey, Australia and Sri Lanka 
over the government’s decision to slap a 20 percent emergency import tariff on 
wheat flour, although the decision was supported by the local milling industry.

“We hope the interests of Indonesia, as well as other emerging economies and 
less developed countries, will be placed as the top priority in the spirit of 
balancing [our footing] with advanced economies,” Gita told The Jakarta Post on 
Thursday when asked for comments regarding Mari’s nomination.

The new leader of the WTO will face the challenge of being the public face of 
an institution that has been stuck in the midst of stalled negotiations for 
years, with little real power to force deals beyond cajoling, encouraging and 
occasionally blaming members.

The incumbent, Lamy, has referred to himself as a “midwife” who can only help a 
deal emerge but cannot order agreements or reforms in the trading system, since 
the WTO is owned by its members, Reuters reported.

The one-month nomination period for candidates will end on Dec. 31. The 
candidates will be required to formally take part in a General Council meeting 
on Jan. 29 attended by WTO members. 

Under the procedures of the world trade governing body, the General Council 
chair will later review candidates and consult with WTO members. The council is 
scheduled to announce the new 
director general before May 31.

If elected, Mari would be the second Indonesian woman to hold a top post in a 
respected international organization, after former finance minister Sri Mulyani 
Indrawati was named as the World Bank’s managing director in 2010. 

Last year, Indonesia nominated veteran scientist Indroyono Soesilo to become 
the head of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), but he failed after 
collecting only 12 out of 180 possible votes.


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