President Correa hails agreement
with flexibility
and considers it a good
“starting point”
ANDINA Agency
Lima, May 17, 2008
Ecuadorian President Rafael
Correa this morning hailed the
framework agreement “with
flexibility” that will allow
Andean countries to adhere to an
association agreement with the
European Union and considered it
a good “starting point.”
He pointed out that the
agreement reached in the meeting
of the Andean bloc with the
European troika constitutes an
“important advance,” for from
now on the CAN and the EU will
use the strategy of a “general
framework agreement with
flexibility” for their
negotiation.
In this way, President Correa
stated, the Andean countries
“will be able to adhere to
certain parts of the agreement,
leaving others aside,” which is
evidence of the existence of a
“legal framework with
flexibility.”
He explained that the pillars of
the agreement are political
dialogue, cooperation and trade,
and that it will be up the
countries themselves to decide
which ones they wish to adhere
to.
“What we are discussing is the
need to have this same
flexibility within the trade
area,” the Ecuadorian President
stated.
“The problem --he said-- lay in
just how far we can go with the
unbundling. No agreement was
reached and, for that reason,
its determination will be a task
for our experts and
negotiators.”
The flexible agreement emerged
the day after the approval of
the Lima Declaration at the
Fifth Summit of Latin America
and the Caribbean and the
European Union (LAC-EU), where
the government leaders of both
continents agreed to prioritize
the negotiation agreements and
to conclude the process in 2009.
President Correa mentioned that,
at the meeting, the EU insisted
that the flexibility consisted
of considering the asymmetries
existing within the CAN, a key
aspect of the negotiation.
The Andean countries do “their
utmost” to negotiate as a bloc,
he pointed out, but the problem
is that not all of the countries
are in the same situation.
“We have not yet reached that
level of coordination (of the EU).
The CAN has a very weak general
framework (…) and the problem
within the CAN is that two
countries have negotiated an FTA
with the
U.S., and their starting
point, their negotiating
position, is lower, perhaps,
than that of Ecuador and
Bolivia, because they have
liberalized many things and have
reached agreements that concern
parts of (the chapter on)
intellectual property.”
In this connection, he asked for
an understanding of this
situation, claiming that there
is nothing wrong with it, for it
can arise in negotiations
between different groups of
countries anywhere in the
world.
“The important point is to reach
minimum consensuses as rapidly
as possible, because our
countries have no time to lose
and should be efficient.”
Correa insisted that there’s
nothing wrong with the fact that
there are different visions in
the CAN about economic
strategies or development
levels, when the important thing
is to reach minimum
consensuses. |