The Phnom Penh Post

EU agrees VN trade deal despite rights concerns

- Niem Chheng

THE EU on Wednesday agreed to a free-trade agreement (FTA) with Vietnam, a country described as having a “major rights-abusing government”. This comes amid the 28-nation bloc preparing the procedure for a possible withdrawal of Cambodia’s Everything But Arms (EBA) preferenti­al trade agreement on grounds of alleged “deteriorat­ion of human rights”.

The European Union Commission on Wednesday presented the EUVietnam trade and investment agreements for signing.

When finalised, it will “eliminate over 99 per cent of a ll ta rif fs on bilatera l trade – worth some 47.6 billion ($ 54 billion) a year – and part ly remove the rest through limited zero-dut y quotas, k nown as tarif f rate quotas, according to the agreement memo.

The EU’s Commission­er for Trade Cecilia Malmstrom earlier this month announced in the EU blog the start of an 18-month process that could see the withdrawal of the Kingdom’s EBA agreement, worth $676 million in duty and tax free imports, for “very troubling developmen­ts with a clear deteriorat­ion of human rights and labour rights, without convincing improvemen­ts in sight”.

The Vietnam pact needs approval from the EU Council and Parliament, and on Wednesday the EU Trade Commission said it wanted the agreement to be finalised “quickly”.

The EU said Vietnam was its second largest trading partner in Asean after Singapore. The Vietnam-EU trade in goods is worth 47.6 bil lion a year and 3.6 bil lion in ser v ices.

The FTA differs from the EBA scheme, with the former bringing benefits for both parties, while the latter benefits the EBA recipient. But both deals have strings attached as FTA partners and EBA beneficiar­ies must respect human rights, experts say.

Malmstrom said the Vietnam deal and a similar one with Singapore would move the bloc closer to a broader regional trade pact with Southeast Asia, the Financial Times reported.

The deal with Vietnam was the “most ambitious agreement we have ever made with a developing country. It sets the standard. It is a very important stepping stone for whatever we do in the region,” Malmstrom said.

She said the deal would “help spread European high standards” of labour

law and environmen­tal protection, as well as “create possibilit­ies for in-depth discussion­s on human rights”.

Human Rights Watch’s Asia division deputy director Phil Robertson said on Thursday that Vietnam had human rights problems that needed to be addressed before the FTA was signed.

“Vietnam is clearly among the most rights abusing government­s in Asean. The government has more than 120 political prisoners behind bars and the number is growing every day,” Robertson said, outlining restrictio­ns of freedom of expression, assembly, of union formation, and a poor court system, among others.

“It is quite clear that Vietnam is a major rights-abusing government, and Human Rights Watch does not sup- port the signing of an EUVietnam trade agreement until Hanoi undertakes serious reforms to respect human rights,” he said.

However, Cambodia, Robertson claimed, deserved to be hit hard by the EU on its failure to meet human rights provisions of the EBA, and now leaders in Phnom Penh have a year to take steps to improve rights, in negotiatio­n with the EU.

But Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said: “What [Robertson] says is not true. He wants to put the blame on the prime minister and make accusation­s without evidence as his intentions are politicall­y motivated.”

Siphan said the Cambodian government would carr y on with the democratic process, implement t he rule of law, and would not act in any way that contravene­d t he Kingdom’s laws.

 ?? EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP ?? European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker (right) and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung attend the signing ceremony to conclude negotiatio­ns to a EU-Vietnam free-trade agreement in Brussels on December 2, 2015.
EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker (right) and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung attend the signing ceremony to conclude negotiatio­ns to a EU-Vietnam free-trade agreement in Brussels on December 2, 2015.
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LIFESTYLE
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NATIONAL
 ?? AFP ?? A Vietnamese court on October 5, jailed five activists up to 15 years after finding them guilty of ‘attempting to overthrow the state’.
AFP A Vietnamese court on October 5, jailed five activists up to 15 years after finding them guilty of ‘attempting to overthrow the state’.

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