Source: Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) |

WTO: UN experts urge negotiators to deliver on Doha commitments at the Nairobi conference

GENEVA, Switzerland, December 11, 2015/APO (African Press Organization)/ --

Ahead of the World Trade Organization’s 10th Ministerial Conference, a group of United Nations human rights experts called on Governments across the world to deliver on the Doha Round Development Agenda and not weasel out of prior commitments to address the needs of developing economies.
 

“If trade is to work for human rights and development it should contribute to the realization of the rights to adequate food, to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health, and to live in a clean environment,” the UN experts said in a public statement* addressed to negotiators due to gather in the Kenyan capital from 15 to 18 December.

“There is no justification for defaulting on the Doha Round commitments, as such action would have a detrimental impact on human rights in many countries,” the experts observed.   They deplored indications that certain developed countries will move for the premature ending of the Doha Round at the upcoming WTO Conference.

The independent experts emphasized that human rights obligations must be reaffirmed in the context of global trade rules to ensure that “WTO negotiations and rules support development efforts to eliminate the root causes of hunger, ill-health, and poverty, strengthen human rights protection and promotion and ultimately ensure that the newly adopted Sustainable Development Goals are achieved.”

In the context of the COP21 negotiations in Paris, the UN experts urged States “to ensure consistency of their commitments so as to make sure trade rules do not erode food security, health and environment protection, but rather contribute to strengthen human rights protection.”

“The WTO 10th Ministerial Conference will be the testing ground for the international community to place people before profits, to prioritise human rights above corporate rights, and to live by the vision of the United Nations as enshrined in the Preamble of its Charter, affirming the determination of ‘we the peoples’”.

(*) Read the UN human rights experts’ full statement: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=16868&LangID=E

 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).