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Sri Lanka GSP trade deal dropped from EU resolution

Friday, 23 October 2009 - 9:23 PM SL Time

Oct 23, 2009 (LBO) - A European Parliament resolution that was critical of Sri Lanka`s human rights record dropped a reference to the GSP Plus trade deal giving duty free access to the island`s exports to European Union markets.
The future of the GSP deal is in doubt after a European Commission report earlier in the week said Sri Lanka was in breach of commitments on human rights required to be eligible for the trade concession.
Fears about the loss of the GSP deal has caused concern among Sri Lankan exporters and was also a reason given for the sharp fall in stock prices this week.

But a European Parliament resolution adopted Thursday only said `Sri Lanka`s economic recovery will depend greatly on foreign direct investment and also on continued EU support`.

The island`s is recovering after ending a 30-year ethnic war with the defeat by government forces of Tamil Tiger separatists in May.

The Members of the European Parliament in their resolution on Sri Lanka said they deplored the fact that over 250,000 Tamil civilians are still held in camps, contrary to undertakings given by the Colombo government.

Sri Lanka has said it is trying to resettle refugees as soon as possible but has been delayed as many villages are mined and also by the need to weed out Tamil Tigers hiding among refugees.

The government on Thursday also announced the start of the resettlement of a fresh batch of refugees in refugee camps.

The European Parliament resolution asks that their return be organised and that humanitarian organisations be given free access to the camps in order to provide the necessary humanitarian assistance.

`Tamil leaders must commit themselves to a political settlement and renounce terrorism and violence once and for all,` it said.

`The government must respect human rights in the conduct of trials of (Tamil Tiger) members,` said the resolution.
The Sri Lankan government must cease its repression of the media in the name of its anti-terrorist legislation, which must be overhauled, and press freedom must be recognised, the MEPs said.

Source(s)
http://www.lankabusinessonline.com/fullstory.php?nid=883602475

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ThinKing
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LK Information  23 Oct 2009 14:30:41 GMT  Report for Abuse  

http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=48968
SRI LANKA: Mixed Reactions to EU Threat to Cut Trade Concessions
By Amantha Perera

COLOMBO, Oct 23 (IPS) - When the European Union announced last year that it was seeking an investigation into alleged human rights violations in Sri Lanka as a precondition for extending concessionary tariff rates for exports from the island state, the government promptly cried foul.

Thus began the posturing as the two sides sparred off. The state s pronouncement conveying its refusal to cooperate in the investigation exacerbated an already tense situation. This month the year-long build-up to this complex drama has finally reached its end. The reckoning day has come.

Based on a yearlong investigation that concluded in September, the EU this week made its findings public: Sri Lanka has been remiss in its human rights obligations, according to its report.

The EU said that the Sri Lankan government could make representations to the 27-member bloc or appeal its case until Nov. 6. It added that the decision to extend its concessions now rests with its member states.

The adverse findings could have a telling impact on the local apparel industry worth 3.5 billion U.S. dollars in 2008 and employing tens of thousands of young labourers. The EU investigation report said that Sri Lanka fell short of a full implementation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the Convention against Torture (CAT) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC).

In its report released on Oct. 19, the EU noted the government s claim that 'it has effectively implemented the three Conventions.' Yet, citing 'facts and information available, including relevant materials and information provided by the government of Sri Lanka (although outside the formal context of the investigation),' it concluded that 'neither the ICCPR, the CAT, nor the CRC, nor the legislation incorporating the obligations under these Conventions have been effectively implemented in Sri Lanka during the period covered by the investigation.'

The EU report specifically said that the delay in implementing the 17th Amendment that would make the appointments of the Attorney General, the Inspector General of the Police, the Chief Justice and other Judges of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals subject to a recommendation from, or approval of, the Constitutional Council had undermined credibility of institutions set up to protect human rights. The appointments are now being made directly by the President.

The EU was the single largest export market for Sri Lankan goods, notably apparel, in 2008, amounting to 2 billion U.S. dollars, according to the EU. A preferential tariff regime known as Generalised System of Preference (GSP) Plus allowed the goods to receive a tax waver of around 100 U.S. million dollars in 2008. The potential breach in the implementation of the conventions now put GSP Plus extension in the balance, the EU said.

'The report comes to the conclusion that there are significant shortcomings in this area and that Sri Lanka is in breach of its GSP Plus commitments,' EU spokesperson for trade, Lutz G llner, said soon after the report was released. 'We will now consult with Member States on whether to prepare a proposal with a view to temporarily suspending these additional trade benefits.'

The report is the culmination of a long-running battle of words between the EU and the Sri Lankan government over rights abuses and alleged lack of investigations within the state. The EU and some of its member countries have been some of the staunchest critics of the Sri Lankan government s conduct of the last phases of its two-and-a-half decade bloody conflict with the militant organisation Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Sri Lanka has famously staved off such criticism in international fora like the United Nations Security Council and the U.N. Human Rights Council with the help of Asian countries like India and China alongside other allies.

Despite the critical report, the EU said it still wanted to maintain a dialogue with Sri Lanka. 'We very much want the ongoing dialogue with Sri Lanka to continue and make a positive breakthrough,' EU Ambassador to Sri Lanka Bernard Savage told IPS.

The Sri Lankan foreign ministry said that it, too, wanted to continue its cordial relations with the EU and would be studying the report carefully. Sources within the government indicated that the government could make representation to the EU before the Nov. 6 deadline, although there has been no official word yet.

Publicly, however, government ministers have been maintaining a tough stance. 'It is fundamentally wrong and, in any event, demonstrably incompatible with the conceptual framework of this trade regime to use this
the EU report
to coerce the Government,' Export Development and International Trade Minister, G. L. Peiris, told the Sri Lankan parliament on Oct. 20.

The minister had previously said that the government would not open its doors to any investigation and looked at such a move as an infringement on Sri Lanka s sovereignty.

'We have every reason to protest vehemently against the threatened use of GSP Plus as a powerful weapon against our country for any purpose whatsoever,' he said.

Peiris was part of a group of four ministers appointed by the President to lobby for the extension of the tariff concessions. He had earlier urged the EU to take into account efforts taken by the government to develop and bring back normalcy in areas formerly held by the now defunct LTTE. 'The EU and the international community should give credit where credit is due,' he said in September.

The real effects of losing the 100 million U.S. dollar-tariff concessions from the European bloc would only be felt if they were removed, but so far opinions and expert assessments appear to be divided. The Central Bank, for instance, has observed that Sri Lankan exports could still prove to be competitively priced even if it were to lose the concessions, citing the Sri Lankan rupee s depreciation and stabilisation against the euro and the pound.

In its latest report on the external trade sector released on Oct. 20, the Bank said the loss arising from a withdrawal of the concessions was not enormous, saying the 100 million U.S. dollar-duty wavers amounted only to 1.4 percent of Sri Lanka s total exports in 2008.

'Therefore, the loss of preferential duty margin by around 6-7 percent arising from a potential withdrawal of the GSP Plus facility is not expected to have an adverse impact on Sri Lanka s exports,' added the report.

But such optimism does not resonate with other experts. Sirimal Abeyaranthana, an economics professor at the Colombo University, fears that while larger and more competitive apparel manufacturers could survive the absence of concessions, smaller operators may not be that lucky. 'The small timers don t have the strength to withstand such a sudden increase,' he said.

On the macroeconomic front, the World Bank said the uncertainty over GSP Plus was a risk to sustaining economic growth. In a report titled Sri Lanka Economic Update released on Oct. 21, the Bank noted that the GSP Plus incentive was instrumental in increasing Sri Lankan imports in to the EU and the apparel sector grew at a rate of 6.3 percent between October 2008 and March 2009.

'The GSP Plus scheme accelerated an already existing trend of increasing garment exports to the EU. By 2008, EU became Sri Lanka s biggest export destination for garments, surpassing the U.S.A,' the report added.

How events will play out in the coming days or weeks is putting everyone on edge, ardently wishing the denouement to this otherwise intense drama will be a happy one.



Edited By - ThinKing - 23 Oct 2009 14:30:57 GMT
KnightOwl
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LK Information  23 Oct 2009 16:43:35 GMT  Report for Abuse  
This is white masters trying to brow beat us. Sri Lankan garments are very competitive in Europe. If not for Sri Lanka white ladies wont be able to buy a thong for few pounds or euros. The may have to resort to home made 'amude' just like in WW II times. I am sure they will give it at the end. M&S and ASDA are already canvessing the government on this issue.
DVLADV
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LK Information  23 Oct 2009 19:00:31 GMT  Report for Abuse  
GSP is only coming for review and renewal in Jan of 2010. GSP is not limited to garments, if I am not mistaken currently SL is exporting between 2700-3000 items under this program.
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