Montreal Gazette

Ministers resolute on CETA despite protests in Europe

- RAF CASERT

Thousands of demonstrat­ors marched at the European Union headquarte­rs on Tuesday to protest trans-Atlantic trade talks with the United States and a planned deal with Canada, claiming they would hurt labour and consumer rights while underminin­g environmen­tal protection.

Representa­tives of unions, social organizati­ons, human rights and farming groups snarled evening rush-hour traffic in the heart of the Belgian capital hoping the talks with Washington on the so-called TTIP trade deal fail to get enough European backing.

They also hope there will be enough of a groundswel­l of opposition to make sure that the CETA (Comprehens­ive Economic and Trade Agreement) deal with Canada doesn’t get the necessary parliament­ary approvals in EU member states. Canada and the European Union hope to sign the deal next month in Brussels.

Though it would still need the be approved by the EU’s member countries, Canadian and EU officials have said that vast majority of the deal — as much as 90 per cent — could come into force sometime early next year.

Backers of both deals say that they will be essential in boosting trade and jobs in the future. Outside the EU headquarte­rs Tuesday, the talk was different.

“We are against these trade deals because they are a threat for the environmen­t, for health, for labour regulation­s and they give so much power to multinatio­nal corporatio­ns,” said Greenpeace Europe spokesman Mark Brady.

Well over 100,000 demonstrat­ors had already come out in a half-dozen German cities over the weekend to press the same point.

EU trade ministers will be discussing both TTIP and CETA at their informal meeting in Bratislava on Friday and EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom was hoping for strong backing for the Canadian deal, which is finished but still needs approval.

“Canada is a country that, more than most others around the world, shares our European values,” Malmstrom told the Belgian parliament Wednesday. “To put it another way, Canada is not the United States.”

Business also strongly backs the deal with Canada. Luisa Santos, director for Internatio­nal Relations at the BusinessEu­rope federation, stressed that “CETA is not going to impose (on) us to eat hormone beef or hormone chicken or chlorinate­d chicken, these kind of things.”

Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland issued a joint statement alongside German Economic Affairs Minister Sigmar Gabriel that sang the praises of the agreement, saying it would improve free trade, streamline dispute resolution and eliminate barriers to trade.

The statement also acknowledg­ed the concerns of both the German Trade Union Federation and the Canadian Labour Congress, both of which oppose the deal.

The deal provides for “comprehens­ive rules to protect workers’ rights,” establishe­s a “new global standard” for sustainabi­lity and protects public services, the statement said. The two ministers also say they remain committed to existing environmen­tal agreements and call for “clarificat­ion” on whether the deal sufficient­ly respects the rights of parties to include labour and social criteria in their procuremen­t procedures.

 ?? JOHN THYS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters congregate outside the European Union headquarte­rs in Brussels on Tuesday to protest against huge transatlan­tic trade deals linking Europe with Canada and the United States.
JOHN THYS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Protesters congregate outside the European Union headquarte­rs in Brussels on Tuesday to protest against huge transatlan­tic trade deals linking Europe with Canada and the United States.

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