New Delhi Next Stop to Strengthen Bilateral Ties and Promote Ambitious Doha
Result; Africa Stop Builds Understanding and Partnerships on Agriculture
NEW DELHI –Tomorrow, U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman will participate
in a series of meetings with senior Indian officials and business community
representatives as part of his trip around the globe to strengthen bilateral
ties and promote a strong and ambitious result in the Doha Round
negotiations.
An important purpose of his trip to New Delhi includes the inaugural meeting
of the U.S.-India Trade Policy Forum. This initiative was launched in July 2005
in connection with the visit of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to
Washington, as a way to elevate and strengthen the two countries’ trade
relationship.
Indian Minister of Commerce and Industry Kamal Nath and Ambassador Portman
will co-chair the Trade Policy Forum and facilitate this important bilateral
dialogue in the areas of tariff and non-tariff barriers on industrial products,
agriculture, intellectual property rights protection, investment and services.
Over the course of the day, Ambassador Portman and Minister Nath will also
provide public remarks to gatherings of the Federation of Indian Chambers of
Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).
The Ambassador will also meet with Mr. Sharad Pawar, Minister of Agriculture,
and other senior Indian officials, and address the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in
India. Each meeting will provide an opportunity to exchange views on bilateral
trade issues and explore ways to achieve a successful outcome in the Doha Round
which will have a meaningful impact on development and generate worldwide
economic growth.
Today, the Ambassador departed Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso where he and
Secretary of Agriculture Mike Johanns participated in a meeting with West
African cotton-producing countries, including Benin, Chad, Mali, Senegal and
Burkina Faso, and a bilateral meeting with the President of Burkina Faso Blaise
Campaore.
The meetings provided a critical opportunity to discuss the U.S. proposal on
agriculture to eliminate export subsidies by 2010, provide deep cuts and
ultimately eliminate trade-distorting domestic support, and deliver deep tariff
cuts that would open new markets to African farmers. After a successful meeting
with C-4 countries, Ambassador Portman and Secretary Johanns toured Faso Cotton
– a cotton gin – and held a roundtable with cotton producers and processors to
better understand their needs and perspectives.
"The African countries would like to see prompt action on cotton, and there
was recognition by the African Ministers that the U.S. had offered the most
ambitious and aggressive proposal in the WTO to not only cut trade-distorting
agricultural subsidies, but eliminate them," said Portman. "They also recognize
that we need their participation to achieve these results."
"That is why we asked African Ministers to work with us as partners in the
effort to achieve the most aggressive result possible in agriculture, a step
which will benefit cotton producing countries in Africa. They were receptive to
partnering with us in this objective, and also expressed appreciation for the
efforts the Bush Administration and the U.S. Senate have made to eliminate the
Step 2 cotton subsidy program," Portman noted.
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