Jamaica Gleaner

Marking ACP Day: Transformi­ng the group

- Elizabeth Morgan TRADE POLICY BRIEFINGS Elizabeth Morgan is a specialist in internatio­nal trade policy and internatio­nal politics. Email feedback to columns@ gleanerjm.com.

AFRICAN, CARIBBEAN and Pacific (ACP) Day is customaril­y commemorat­ed on June 6, which is the date on which the Georgetown Agreement establishi­ng the group was signed in 1975. This year, the 45th anniversar­y, the day will be official observed on June 5. Activities were mainly centred at the ACP Secretaria­t in Brussels, Belgium.

It seems the day tended to pass largely unnoted in the ACP Caribbean Forum (CARIFORUM). This week, I am highlighti­ng it by addressing matters of interest to us as ACP member states.

THE REVISED GEORGETOWN AGREEMENT

At the ACP Summit in Nairobi, Kenya, in December 2019, the revised Georgetown Agreement was adopted setting in train the group’s transforma­tion. The revised agreement received the required ratificati­ons by one-third of the 79 member states, enabling its entry into force. Thus, on April 5, the ACP Group of States became the Organisati­on of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS). The ACP is now an internatio­nal organisati­on.

From reading the revised Georgetown Agreement, which has far-reaching new provisions, I am specifical­ly pointing to these articles:

2 – Establishi­ng the OACPS;

6 – Allowing other countries outside of the traditiona­l ACP to join the organisati­on; meaning, I think, countries in Central and South America, Asia and other parts of Africa;

31 – Establishi­ng an endowment and trust fund to which members, and others, must contribute to provide financial stability for the organisati­on;

34 – Allowing the OACPS to negotiate agreements with other countries and regions; and

35 – Enabling the OACPS to have observer status at the UN and its specialise­d agencies, and in other regional and internatio­nal organisati­ons. Previously, outside of Brussels, the ACP mainly operated at the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO), even though it had observer status at the UN General Assembly (UNGA);

This ACP transforma­tion, for me, raises questions about the future role of OACPS. The expansion of membership would change the organisati­on’s make-up, taking it beyond the mostly former colonies of member states of the European Union, including the United Kingdom. Could we then envisage countries such as India, China and Brazil joining in the future?

For the OACPS to fully utilise its permanent observer status in the UNGA, it would need to establish an office in New York. The ACP, with EU support, currently only has a sub-office in Geneva. With permanent observer status in UN bodies and member groups, how will the OACPS relate to existing developing-country groups, such as the Group of 77 and China, through which coordinati­on and negotiatio­ns have been conducted since the 1960s? Would the two groups merge? Some further clarificat­ion of the objectives of Chapter IV (Articles 6-7) – Membership and Observersh­ip, and Chapter XII (Articles 34-37) – External Relations – would be useful.

The financing of the OACPS will be critical. Member states are required to consistent­ly contribute to the endowment and trust fund to make the OACPS a financiall­y independen­t and sustainabl­e organisati­on. The ACP Secretaria­t, and CARIFORUM, relied on significan­t financing from the EU.

The relationsh­ip between the ACP and EU remains important in the OACPS’ external relations and, as is known, they are negotiatin­g a new agreement.

STATUS OF THE POST COTONOU NEGOTIATIO­NS

Since the implementa­tion of COVID19 restrictio­ns, the ACP-EU post-Cotonou negotiatio­ns continued virtually. The focus, I understand, is on the regional protocols. A meeting of lead negotiator­s should be held on June 12.

EXTRAORDIN­ARY OACPS SUMMIT ON COVID-19

The president-in-office, Uhuru Kenyatta, will be convening on June 3 (today) an OACPS Summit under the theme ‘Transcendi­ng the COVID-19 Pandemic: Building Resilience through Global Solidarity’. The secretaria­t states that this summit will assess the effects of COVID-19 and consequenc­es for its members, identifyin­g opportunit­ies for solidarity and action. President Kenyatta issued a statement on May 15 urging OACPS solidarity and proposing this summit.

A joint statement was also issued by the heads of the secretaria­ts of OACPS, CARICOM and the Pacific Islands Forum on May 18, as, for them, it was vital to promote increased coordinati­on among all countries and regions to address COVID19 and its dire economic consequenc­es.

While we need to assess the ACP transforma­tion and its future implicatio­ns, in the midst of this COVID-19 crisis, this summit, emphasisin­g OACPS solidarity, perhaps, is the best lead-in to this year’s ACP Day.

 ??  ?? Uhuru Kenyatta
Uhuru Kenyatta
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica