Meeting
on the AITIC Initiative on Trade-Related Capacity Building and Signing
Ceremony
(Doha,
10 November 2001)

Introduction
The
Signing Ceremony
I.
Introduction

1. At the
Fourth Session of the Ministerial Conference of the WTO at Doha, Qatar,
representatives of the less-advantaged [Note
1] and industrial countries met to attend the signing ceremony
of the AITIC Initiative on Trade-Related Capacity Building and Greater
Participation in the International Trading System. This initiative
was the outcome of several discussions of a group of Geneva-based representatives
interested in AITIC's development.
2. Previous
meetings of the working group on AITIC's development [Note 2] had concentrated on how best to guide
its development - including the expansion of its financial base and structure
- to cope with the increasing demand for its services from the less-advantaged
country representatives present in Geneva, as well as the non-residents.
3. The AITIC
Initiative aims to explore options for the expansion and improvement of
AITIC's financial basis and structure by, inter alia, exploring
the feasibility of its transformation into an inter-governmental organisation.
Consultations began at the working group meeting and continued in the
run up and at Doha itself. The agreed text is attached (Annex
1).
II. The Signing Ceremony

4. The meeting
was chaired by the Executive Director of the International Trade Centre,
Mr. J-D Bélisle. It started off with introductory remarks by the
Swiss Minister of the Economy, Mr. Pascal Couchepin, who welcomed participants
and noted the importance attached by Switzerland to increasing the participation
of the LACs in the multilateral trading system. Switzerland, aware of
the limitations these countries face in terms of capacity and resources,
had sought new ways to assist them to have a more active trade diplomacy.
It had thus created AITIC in 1998. Although a Swiss initiative, AITIC
was an independent agency that focused on giving personalised assistance
to LAC representatives. He also remarked that, to give specific support
to those members and observers of the WTO with insufficient resources
to have a permanent presence in Geneva for the time being, AITIC had established
a "Non-Residents' Unit" in October 2000. Finally, he said that
the initiative that was to be signed, thanks to the collaboration and
support of those present, was another building bloc to the "participatory
and all-inclusive system we all aspire to construct".
5. The next
speaker was the UK's Secretary of State for International Development,
Ms. Clare Short, who remarked on the priority assigned by the UK to poverty
alleviation and sustainable development and to a greater participation
of developing countries in the multilateral trading system. The world's
poorest countries could benefit from existing and new trade rules. But
they needed to strengthen their capacity to be able to exert their influence
effectively and draw benefits from the globalisation process. The UK has
been at the forefront in addressing capacity constraints. Aware of AITIC's
contribution to this aim, and to support the tailored assistance the Agency
offered in particular to those countries under-represented in Geneva,
she was pleased to announce a contribution of £1 million to assist the
possible transformation of AITIC.
6. UNCTAD's
Secretary General, Mr. Rubens Ricupero, addressed the meeting focusing
on the importance of the "networking" which took place among the trade-related
agencies in Geneva. He underscored the importance of coordination and
collaboration among agencies to make the delivery of technical assistance
and capacity building more effective. In this regard, he stressed his
positive assessment of the way AITIC and UNCTAD have worked together to
their mutual benefit and that of their target countries, which he said
provides a concrete example of the kind of collaboration that is possible
and needed. Mr. Mac Harb, MP, a representative from the Canadian Parliament,
took the floor to draw attention to the value of capacity building in
enhancing the participation of developing countries in the multilateral
trading system. He praised the Swiss initiative that had established AITIC.
He also stressed the value of supporting resource-constrained. Finally,
a representative of Cambodia - a non-resident, least-developed country
in the process of accession to the WTO - Secretary of State Sok Siphana,
gave a vivid account of the difficulties faced by a less-advantaged country
to follow the WTO from afar. He highlighted the importance to his country
of accession to the WTO, and the variety of national official actors involved
in a complex web of subjects negotiated in the WTO. He thus greatly appreciated
the establishment of AITIC's Non-Residents' Unit, of which his country
was to be a prime beneficiary, as Cambodia's Ambassador, not resident
in Geneva, planned to be making of the Non-Residents' Unit more frequently
in the future.
7. The Chairman
concluded the meeting with a brief statement wishing AITIC well on the
new phase it was initiating and recalling his involvement at the outset
of the establishment of AITIC. He requested the Director of AITIC to make
a few remarks on what she saw as the future work programme for AITIC.
8. AITIC's
Director thanked all those attending the meeting. She expressed her appreciation
to them for taking time from a very busy schedule and particularly at
this important juncture for the future of the multilateral trading system.
She mentioned the tall order ahead in satisfying the demands of an increasingly
active trade-related agenda. But she stressed that AITIC, under the Development
Plan that has been prepared with the support and involvement of the current
and prospective donors and of beneficiaries, will strive hard to meet
their expectations. A prime concern for the future was to strengthen the
Non-Residents' Unit and to continue providing the personalised assistance
that had become AITIC's hallmark. She highlighted the importance the Agency
attached to providing this support in the three official languages of
the WTO. She concluded her remarks by inviting those participants who
were able and willing to sign the Initiative to do so there and then.
However, those who were short of time would be able to do so at their
convenience in the few days to come. At the ceremony itself, 27 participants
signed. By the end of the Ministerial Conference, a total of 63 signatories
had supported the Initiative, including seven intergovernmental organisations
(Annex 2).
Annex
1

AITIC
INITIATIVE ON TRADE-RELATED CAPACITY BUILDING AND GREATER PARTICIPATION
IN THE INTERNATIONAL TRADING SYSTEM
We, the
undersigned Ministers,
Re-affirming
our commitment to a fairer and inclusive multilateral trading system;
Recognising
the urgency and importance of strengthening the capacity of certain developing
countries and economies in transition and, in particular, least-developed
countries to participate effectively in the WTO and the international
trading system;
Recognising
also the difficulty faced by these Members and Observers in participating
effectively in the WTO when they have only a small, resource-constrained
mission in Geneva or no resident representation at all there;
Sharing
the aspiration that all Members and Observers be appropriately represented
in Geneva as soon as possible in order to participate effectively in the
WTO;
Acknowledging
the effectiveness of the assistance provided to such Members and Observers
in the meantime by the Swiss-funded Agency for International Trade Information
and Cooperation (AITIC), the growing demand for such assistance and the
efforts made to meet this demand, inter alia through the setting up of
a Non-Residents Unit and the preparation of a Development Plan;
Recognising
that this demand may best be met by a broadening of the funding base,
and of the governance structure of the agency, with the full collaboration
of other trade-related organisations;
Decide to
set up immediately a Task Force, to consider the feasibility of transforming
AITIC into an Intergovernmental Organisation or by any other means to
improve the financial and functional basis of AITIC taking into account
other organisations and their mandates;
Invite the
Task Force to make a progress report on the occasion of the UN International
Conference on Financing for Development;
Call
on others to join this effort.
Annex 2

AITIC
INITIATIVE ON TRADE-RELATED CAPACITY BUILDINGAND GREATER PARTICIPATION
IN THE INTERNATIONAL TRADING SYSTEM
SIGNATORIES
Members
and Observers of WTO
| Members |
. |
Angola |
Honduras |
Sri
Lanka |
Barbados |
Ireland |
Swaziland |
Belize |
Japan |
Sweden |
Benin |
Kyrgyz
Rep. |
Switzerland |
Bolivia |
Lesotho |
Tanzania |
Burkina
Faso |
Madagascar |
Uganda |
Burundi |
Mali |
United
Kingdom |
Canada |
Mauritania |
Zambia |
Colombia |
Mauritius |
. |
Congo |
Namibia |
Observers |
Dem.
Rep. of the Congo |
Netherlands |
Bhutan |
Denmark |
Nicaragua |
Cambodia |
Djibouti |
Nigeria |
Cape
Verde |
Dominica |
Norway |
Nepal |
El
Salvador |
Panama |
Lao
People's Dem. Rep. |
Finland |
Papua
New Guinea |
Sudan |
Guinea |
Paraguay |
Tajikistan |
Guinea-Bissau |
Senegal |
Tonga |
Haiti |
Sierra
Leone |
Vanuatu |
Intergovernmental Organisations
·
African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP)
· Central America Secretariat for Economic Integration (SIECA)
· International Trade Centre (ITC)
· Organisation internationale de la francophonie (OIF)
· Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD)
/ Development Assistance Committee
· United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)
· United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
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