The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thousands protest in Europe against Atlantic free trade deals

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BERLIN: Tens of thousands of people protested in European cities against planned free trade deals with the US and Canada they say would undermine democracy and lower food safety, environmen­tal and labour standards.

Organisers - an alliance of environmen­tal groups, labour unions and opposition parties said 320,000 people took part in rallies in seven German cities, including Berlin, Hamburg, Munich and Frankfurt. Police put the figure at around 180,000.

Smaller protests were also planned in other European cities, including Vienna and Salzburg in Austria and Gothenburg and Stockholm in Sweden.

In Berlin, demonstrat­ors waved banners reading ‘STOPP CETA - STOPP TTIP’, another placard said ‘People over profits’.

The demonstrat­ions are against the Transatlan­tic Trade and Investment Partnershi­p (TTIP) with the US and the Comprehens­ive Economic Trade Agreement (CETA) with Canada, currently being negotiated by the European Union’s executive with the respective government­s across the Atlantic.

Opposition in Europe to the trade deals has risen over the past year, with critics saying the pacts would hand too much power to big multinatio­nals at the expense of consumers and workers by establishi­ng arbitratio­n courts to settle disputes between companies and government­s.

EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom defended the planned trade deals and accused the opponents of deliberate­ly heating up the debate with “horror stories and lies”.

“The idea that TTIP will lower environmen­tal standards is simply not true,” Malmstrom told German daily Bild.

“Also the assertion that we’ll be flooded with geneticall­y modified food is simply wrong. Our democracy of course won’t be undermined as some seem to

The idea that TTIP will lower environmen­tal standards is simply not true.

believe.”

Malmstrom said German exporters would benefit highly from the deals because they would reduce non-tariff barriers to trade. “This helps Germany and creates jobs,” she added.

German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel, who faces crunch CETA vote on Monday by his Social Democrats (SPD), said that the trade agreements were Europe’s best chance to shape globalisat­ion so that it served people and not only the interests of a few businesses.

“If CETA fails, then we’ll not have another chance to shape globalisat­ion in this way for decades,” Gabriel told Bild am Sonntag in an interview published on Saturday.

“Europe still is the biggest trading region in the world. We should use this power.”

Gabriel’s SPD, junior coalition partner of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ve, will vote on Monday whether to back the trade deal between the EU and Canada.

Gabriel, who is also vice chancellor and SPD leader, has championed CETA as part of his remit as economy minister, and to demonstrat­e the center-left party’s business credential­s.

But critics on the SPD’s left wing are skeptical about the benefits of the deal and believe it would give multinatio­nals greater access to European markets without creating jobs.

A failure to secure a majority of delegates at Monday’s SPD convention in favor of the accord could scupper Gabriel’s chances of standing as the party’s candidate for chancellor in national elections next year. — Reuters

Cecilia Malmstrom, EU Trade Commission­er

 ??  ?? Consumer rights activists take part in a march to protest against the TTIP and CETA in Frankfurt, Germany. Tens of thousands of people protested in European cities against planned free trade deals with the US and Canada they say would undermine...
Consumer rights activists take part in a march to protest against the TTIP and CETA in Frankfurt, Germany. Tens of thousands of people protested in European cities against planned free trade deals with the US and Canada they say would undermine...

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