| Short on Time, Horse-Trading Starts
By Thalif Deen
The Johannesburg Summit is going the way of all U.N. conferences
-- fighting for survival as it goes down to the wire.
“The delegates are now reduced to the lowest point
in their bargaining: horse-trading and arm twisting,”
Remi Parmentier of Greenpeace International told Terra Viva.
The United States and Japan are ready to accept time-bound
targets on water on condition that developing nations agree
to remove similar targets on renewable energy.
Parmentier said that the two countries are, in effect, telling
developing nations: “Come on guys, we will give you
money for water if you don’t press for concrete action
on energy and climate change.”
The entire summit has gone into “an arm-twisting mode”,
he warned, as both countries were also resorting to the tried-and-tested
technique of “cheque book diplomacy”.
Lowell Flanders, the senior U.N. official tracking negotiations,
told reporters that only about 5 percent of the draft plan
of action is now under negotiations.
“They are the most difficult and the most contentious,”
he said, listing 14 issues and sub-issues that may have to
await the arrival of ministers next week for a final decision.
The 14 contentious issues include good governance, human
rights, the world solidarity fund for the elimination of poverty,
sanitation, energy, trade and finance, natural resources,
climate change, global public goods, globalisation, social
dimension, partnerships, the 10-year programme for production
and consumption and the political declaration that precedes
the draft plan of action.
At the time of going to press last night, negotiations were
still underway on sanitation and energy.
Asked whether there was horse-trading behind closed doors,
Flanders told Terra Viva: “That’s what negotiations
are all about.”
Even developing nations seem inclined to follow this not-so-righteous
path. At a closed door meeting of the Group of 77 developing
countries, an African delegate was quoted as saying: “We
need to start pro-actively looking into package deals in exchange
for things we want. We will have to work out as many trade-offs
as possible.”
Meanwhile, the political declaration spelling out some of
the basic principles on sustainable development -- which members
pledge to adhere to -- is struggling to be born.
Flanders said the declaration was being put together by South
Africa, in consultation with ministers. But to his knowledge,
no draft text was still available.
Responding to a question, Flanders said he cannot comment
on whether the summit will spill over into an additional day
of negotiations if some of the 14 issues remain deadlocked
on the final day of the summit next Wednesday.
Parmentier said that South Africa has summoned a meeting
of trade ministers to resolve some of the issues.
“But trade ministers are not qualified to deal with
environmental issues,” he said, warning that the summit
was in danger of being hijacked by these ministers as they
make desperate attempts to find answers.
The United States and the European Union have also been at
loggerheads over several trade-related issues triggering an
E.U. walkout from a contact group negotiating trade matters.
The rare verbal battle between Western delegates apparently
generated a round of spontaneous applause from Third World
delegates.
Tony Juniper, vice chair of Friends of the Earth International
(FoEI), says “do not believe the U.N. and delegation
spin doctors claiming that progress in the talks is good because
95% of the text has been agreed.”
“This is just a word counting trick that FoEI has heard
before at failed negotiations from the Seattle World Trade
Organisation (WTO) talks to the Hague climate talks.”
He said that important words relating to globalisation remain
entirely “un-agreed”. This is not “rapid
progress” in any normal sense of these words.
Juniper also said: "The whole point of this summit is
to tackle the huge problems caused by environmental degradation
and poverty, which have worsened since the Rio Earth Summit.
At the moment, some governments, notably the U.S., are even
trying to backtrack from commitments made 10 years ago.”
“This must not be allowed to happen. We must see real
action over the next few days -- world leaders owe it the
people of the world to make progress here in Johannesburg."
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