For immediate release: 5 February 2003
New Zealand government's position on GATS confusing to international
coalition
"The New Zealand government's
hypocrisy on the General Agreement on Trade in
Services (GATS) becomes more extraordinary by the day," Professor Jane
Kelsey
told the Second International Meeting of Cultural Professional Organisations in
Paris yesterday.
This followed disclosure by the Member of the European Commission responsible
for culture, Ms Viviane Reding, that New Zealand was one of five countries that
have lodged an "aggressive" request for Europe to commit its cultural
services to the GATS rules. Both Ms Reding and the EC's Director General of
Trade Hervé Jouanjean expressed their dismay and confusion about New Zealand's
position.
Professor Kelsey told delegates how, back in April 2000, our Prime Minister
said it was "ridiculous" that the GATS could prevent "perfectly
legitimate calls for local content" (NZ Herald 10 April 2000). Just
two months ago she acknowledged that concerns about the GATS were valid and the
National Government's failure to reserve culture from the GATS was a
"matter for regret" (Morning Report, 6 December 2002).
"If it has been a disaster for New Zealand, why on earth is our government
demanding that Europe make the same mistake?" Jane Kelsey asked.
"This lack of principle is quite staggering. While our Prime Minister
portrays herself as the champion of national culture at home, she has
apparently endorsed the opposite position at the World Trade Organisation
(WTO)."
Professor Kelsey was invited to Paris by the International Coalition for
Cultural Diversity to explain to the meeting of actors, directors, publishers,
musicians and other creative artists how the GATS rules are preventing the
Labour government from implementing its mandated policy of compulsory local
content quotas.
Kelsey explained that there are exit routes but the government lacks the
political will to take them. "New Zealand's right to control our essential
services continues to be sacrificed for the illusory goal of free trade in
agriculture. Our challenge is to create
a climate where that trade-off is no longer politically sustainable."
Speaking to the conference delegates, French President Chirac vowed
"steadfastly and fiercely to defend culture and creations of the mind from
market rules that reduce them to the rank of ordinary merchandise" as the
negotiating position of the EC, and endorsed an International Declaration on
Cultural Diversity being developed by culture ministers as a vehicle to promote
genuine internationalization of culture diversity.
Lebanon's Culture Minister Mr Ghassan Salamé insisted that understanding
between civilizations was essential to reduce conflicts and promote peace, and
condemned the cloning of US nationalism which the GATS represents.
Senegal's Culture Minister Mr Abdou Fall summed up the sentiments of the
meeting: "Culture is life and no government has the right to deny that to
their people," he said.
Ends. Text 440 words
Further information is available from Professor Jane Kelsey, who can be reached on her cell phone at 021 765 055. Released by ARENA (Action, Research, Education Network of Aotearoa).