
VER
TAMBIÉN:
Comunicados
de prensa
Noticias
Discursos:
Renato Ruggiero
|

Mr.
President, Ministers, ladies and gentlemen: Mr.
President, thank you for honouring us with your presence
and thank you for sharing your team in the USTR and
Geneva with us. Mr. President, I read how you think the
WTO ought to have a human face. I've worked hard on this,
but when I looked in the mirror this morning I
felt a sense of failure. We have assembled here in
Seattle the largest, most prepared number of Trade
Ministers in history. From the most mighty nations to the
most modest and vulnerable.I can
report to you, they come as proud representatives of
sovereign nations, eager to participate seeking simply
the gift of opportunity, a fair seat at the table. This
is an historic moment. We both represent a generation
that still stands in awe of the vision and the splendour
and global generosity of our parents' generation. From
the ruin, rubble and despair of a great conflict, made
inevitable by mean-spirited treaties, by the pain of a
great depression made deeper, darker, more lethal by
protectionist policies, our parents decided to build an
international architecture based on common and universal
values of the law, of co-operation and generous
opportunity. They decided on the Marshall Plan, they
created the UN, IMF, the World Bank and the GATT now the
WTO. The last decade has seen their struggle finally won.
Brave men and women tore down the Iron Curtain. Brave men
and women in every continent endorsed by their sacrifices
the now universal values of freedom. Nelson Mandela's
smile ignited and lifted the spirits of men and women
everywhere.
But I
need to say that many of these freedom fighters are at
our conference, now Ministers and advisers. With the
walls down, who of us are prepared to say we shouldn't
allow their products into our markets. By refusing a fair
deal to the small and vulnerable, those locked out, the
poorest countries, are we saying they struggled in vain?
That they were wrong to believe in the ideals of
political and economic freedom? These universal truths.
This is what they would want me to say to you. We know
that trade in itself is not enough. Your personal
leadership has seen progress in debt issues. The heavy
hand of history has its thumb on the windpipe of many of
our Members. One of our Members pays up to nine times
more in debt repayment than on public health.
There
is this contradiction between good people in wealthy
countries that on Sunday at Church give money to help out
those who have suffered famine and flood, BUT on Monday
sign a petition stopping the opportunity of workers in
those same sad lands to sell what they create. Half of
the world's population lives on under $2 per day.
President Truman's Marshall Plan would pale into
insignificance in terms of lifting living standards,
providing hope and opportunity as compared to what you
and we can do over the next few days. If we dismantle
barriers we would increase world economic output by 3 per
cent. A $1.2 trillion boost to the world economy and the
poorest nations would gain the most. Non OECD nations
would get a lift of nearly 4 per cent growth over the
next decade. Mr. President, we are still faced with a
solid wall of insurmountable opportunities. We will
overcome. We will deliver here in Seattle a result that's
fair, balanced. We can do something here, with your
leadership. A result that we can be proud of, a result
that will keep us warm in our old age.
Everyone
here knows what technology and science can do to improve
the condition of the sick, those who yearn to learn.
Everyone believes in globalization getting the
best medical care from anywhere when their child is sick.
When I was a child brought up in the bush, the greatest
gift a working class father and mother could give their
children was a copy of the Encyclopaedia Britannica
it cost a worker a year's wages. Now, it's on the
internet for free. Ministers assembled here want for
their countries the best, the best the world has to
offer. This is the chance to help build the new world.
There are so many in this conference who also marched,
protested, went to prison, fought, suffered.
The
idealists sit in this conference. They share ideals based
in good measure on those ideals that created your great
nation. These men and women were chosen by their people,
they must ask their Parliaments and Congresses to ratify
what they agree. Mr. President, this conference is
doomed, doomed to succeed. Failure is unthinkable. The status
quo is not good enough. Because that was just
yesterday's compromise. Our people can't
wait, science and change won't wait. Mr.
President they look to you for leadership, and I know I
can report back to them that as always America and you
are providing that leadership.
|
|