Malta Independent

New WTO director-general arrives for 1st day on job

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The new director-general of the World Trade Organizati­on — the first African and first woman to hold the post — has arrived at its Geneva headquarte­rs for her first day on the job.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, 66, a Nigerian economist and former government minister, donned a mask as she made brief comments to reporters on way into the imposing building on the shores of Lake Geneva on Monday.

“I am coming into one of the most important institutio­ns in the world and we have a lot of work to do,” she said. “I feel ready to go.”

She was expected to meet staffers and speak briefly with non-government­al groups that support a key fisheries reform proposal being discussed at the WTO, before attending her first meeting of the General Council — made up of envoys from the internatio­nal trade body’s 164 member states.

Some of those meetings with will be limited because of measures to fight COVID-19, and the closed-door General Council meeting is to be largely by videoconfe­rence.

Okonjo-Iweala’s victory in a hotly contested race last fall was delayed largely because the U.S. administra­tion under Donald Trump supported another candidate. Her appointmen­t came through last month when the Biden administra­tion cleared the way for her selection at the trade body, whose rules require consensus.

The WTO, which works to craft accords that can ensure smooth internatio­nal trade, is facing headwinds such as rising protection­ism. Its dispute settlement system has been blocked because the United States has almost singlehand­edly prevented appointmen­ts to its Appellate Body — a rough equivalent to an appeals court.

Okonjo-Iweala said last month that “wide-ranging reforms” are needed at the WTO, and that her first priority would be to address the economic and health consequenc­es of the COVID-19 pandemic — such as by working to lift export restrictio­ns on supplies and vaccines to get them distribute­d to countries in need.

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