Cotu Secretary-General Francis Atwoli has asked the European
Union (EU) to stop pushing African countries into signing the
contentious Economic Partnerships Agreements (EPAs) saying this will
undermine the weak economies of the continent’s states.
Speaking
during a meeting with the European Commission in Brussels, Mr Atwoli
said the EU had taken advantage of the West African states and their
weak demands to force them to sign the agreements which he said would
totally affect their economies in a negative way.
“EPAs
in the current form will help maintain the current subsidised European
agro-food dumping into African countries,” he said, citing the collapse
of the textile industry in Kenya.
ALLOW FLEXIBILITY
The
Cotu boss observed that the only way out is for the EU to allow
flexibility and ensure clear safeguards for economies of African states
are adopted, pointing out that the EPAs in their current form are
untenable and they will need unconditional and flexible changes to make
them suitable to African states.
The Cotu boss was
speaking during a meeting with the European Commission officials led by
Montserrat Gaga De La Mata, the commission's Trade Affairs Officer on
EPAs.
He singled out the East Africa Community, arguing that while it
stands as the most food secure and sovereign region in Africa due to the
traditional protection of its agro-food production, tariffs on
agricultural imports are to be decreased over time.
Citing
the example of the extile industry in Kenya, Mr Atwoli noted that the
manufacturing sector was the hardest hit as a result of opening up of
the local market where Kenya's infant factories were forced to compete
with those in Europe which are heavily subsidised yet they are supposed
to produce the same products.
IMPACT ASSESSMENT
Mr
Atwoli called for an independent impact assessment to be prepared for
each regional integration process taking into account gendered impact
and called on the current EPAs negotiations to stop.
“Those
signed should not enter into force and interim EPAs should be repealed
and any future negotiations should respect African regional integration
process,” he said.
He equally lashed out at the failure
by African countries to build capacity to negotiate in order to inform
their future negotiations with the European Union.
He
added that the EU has taken advantage of the prevailing challenges in
the negotiation capacity to push their agenda undeterred as those sent
to engage the union lack basic negotiation skills to challenge the
European powers.
He applauded the tough stand taken by
EAC member states, particularly Tanzania, pointing out the exit of
Britain from the EU raises further questions and demands on how the EPAs
should be drafted.
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