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OPPOSITION LEADERS ADDRESSES ACP-EU EMINENT PERSONS PANEL IN SENEGAL

AT a meeting of influential leaders and eminent decision-makers from the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) countries and the European Union (EU) discussing the legacy and future prospects of the ACP-EU Partnership, Opposition Leader, Dr Bharrat Jagdeo, addressed several issues.

Under the theme ‘From Lomé to Cotonou Post-2020: a changing perspective in the ACP-EU relationship’, the High-Level event aimed for fruitful exchanges of views to evaluate past experiences and debate options for ACP-EU relations beyond 2020, when the current Cotonou Partnership Agreement is due to end.

Jagdeo, a former President of Guyana and a Member of the ACP Eminent Persons Group, was part of a panel debate including a number of influential figures. He addressed the valuable nature of the partnership between EU and the ACP, as underpinned by the Lomé Convention and the Cotonou Agreement.

The Lomé Convention is a trade and aid agreement between the European Economic Community (EEC) and 71 African, Caribbean, and Pacific (ACP) countries, first signed in February 1975 in Lomé, Togo. The Cotonou Agreement is a treaty between the European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States ("ACP countries"). It was signed in June 2000 in Cotonou, Benin's largest city, by 78 ACP countries (Cuba did not sign) and the then fifteen Member States of the European Union.

Jagdeo pointed out that for many ACP countries the EU had been the largest source of development funding. However, he stressed that many elements of that partnership did not work because they were asymmetrically determined by the EU without a full understanding of the realities of many member States of the ACP particularly the island States.

At the meeting the Opposition Leader also explored the evolving challenges to any future partnership beyond 2020 when the Cotonou agreement ends.

He outlined too the key elements of the work of the Eminent Persons Group of which he is the Vice Chairman. Jagdeo stressed the necessity of the Heads of State and Governments examining the report in their upcoming meeting in Papua New Guinea to approve the key framework to guide the negotiations with the EU for the post 2020 relationship.

The longstanding partnership brings together 78 African, Caribbean and Pacific countries and the 28 Member States of the EU under a comprehensive cooperation agreement, covering trade, political dialogue and development cooperation.

The event was co-organised by the ACP Secretariat and the European Commission. It represents a first opportunity to jointly discuss the ACP-EU relationship at this level since internal processes for reflection on the topic were launched by both sides.

April 30, 2016. PPP Press Release

 
Peoples Progressive Party/Civic's photo.

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Thumbs up for Dr. Jagdeo

The Cotonou Agreement is a treaty between the European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States ("ACP countries"). It was signed in June 2000 in Cotonou, Benin's largest city, by 78 ACP countries (Cuba did not sign) and the then fifteen Member States of the European Union.

FM
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Class Act to Follow!

What new ideas did Jagdeo bring? 

Or is he still screaming and wailing because EU tax payers refuse to subsidize the import of a product which they produce in abundance?

FM
Nehru posted:

Oh shit Caribj gun jump off the Washington Bridge!!!!!!!

Pavi, you may not realize it, but your post above has no relationship what caribny posted. He's making the point that the old ACP-EEC Lome Convention that provided guaranteed markets and price certainty way above market pricing is history. The Contonou treaty with the ACP countries cannot go back to the Lome arrangement. The Lome subsidies were an acknowledgement of an historic relationship of the colonial countries screwing up the developing ACP world with dependencies on primary products with the industrialized world controlling markets; and in the special case of sugar with beet production replacing cane sugar and with the advent of HFCS the cane sugar sector in the ACP countries needed special redressing. That acknowledgment seems to reached its sunset.

Kari

Kari, what sunset are you talking about?  The convention was held to discuss future prospects of the ACP-EU partnership.  There were some influential and diverse people in attendance who have impacted policy making around the world.  Don't underestimate them!

Bibi Haniffa
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Kari, what sunset are you talking about?  The convention was held to discuss future prospects of the ACP-EU partnership.  There were some influential and diverse people in attendance who have impacted policy making around the world.  Don't underestimate them!

I  was referring to sugar in the context of the Lome convention and the economic realities of today.

Kari
Bibi Haniffa posted:

Kari, what sunset are you talking about?  The convention was held to discuss future prospects of the ACP-EU partnership.

The EU warned Caribbean sugar exporters that the subsidy was going to come to an end. This because they  knew that all of these countries were uncompetitive.

They offered monetary assistance to ease a transition to other industries. Trinidad, and St Kitts shut down their sugar industry.  Jamaica and Barbados reduced the industry with a re focus on the domestic market.  St Kitts is using the money to train former sugar workers to find jobs in other sectors.

Barbados also uses the sugar industry as landscaping for the tourist industry, given that cane is much more attractive than the dry bush which will replace it.  Barbados lacking lush rain forest mountains to offset this, and doesn't want to end up looking like Antigua, another flat and bland island.

What did your hero do.  He took the money and EXPANDED the sugar industry, leaving it as one which has unit costs of production way its revenue potential.  Seeing this, he quietly began to implement plans to shut down the unprofitable sugar estates, transferring some of these former sugar estate land to his real estate tycoon oligarchs.

So who cares that he is in Senegal. The man is a waste and you are too dumb, slave like, or both, to see this!

FM
Last edited by Former Member
ba$eman posted:

BJ overshadowing the PNC leadership!

Bibi Haniffa posted:

What leadership?  There is none. 

Digging and digging and digging deeper to find rudimentary leadership skills.

FM

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