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Open letter to Meatco on Wallie Roux’s suspension PDF Print
Written by Staff Reporters   
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Open letter to Meatco on Wallie Roux’s suspension
Page 2

The undersigned organisations would like to express their serious concern with regard to Mr Wallie Roux, internationally renowned economic analyst with MEATCO Namibia, who has currently been suspended and faces a disciplinary hearing (with the possible result of his dismissal) for publishing articles critical of the negotiations with the European Union (EU) over the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPA’s).

We would like to stress that Mr Roux’s analyses (and pertinent worries) on EPA’s are shared by many African and European researchers and are adopted by a fair number of social movements in Africa and other parts of the world who are also raising their voices against the anticipated domination of their countries by trans-national corporations.
Currently, most African countries are involved in negotiations for a free trade agreement with the European Union as well as negotiations for global free trade within the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Both these processes will have far reaching implications for African countries. Free trade will not only affect businesses, it will have a direct impact on the lives and livelihoods of workers, small-scale farmers and the poor in general.  The shift of emphasis from multilateral negotiations towards bilateral negotiations such as the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) means that industrial nations can now put even more pressure on developing countries. Hundreds of thousands of small scale African dairy farmers have already been threatened by cheaper imports of milk powder and other dairy products from the EU.
The EU is e.g. providing huge subsidies to dairy products which are exported to Tanzania. Small scale dairy producers cannot compete with these dumping practises and have been forced out of business. Similarly, small scale farmers in Namibia and Botswana are threatened by imported beef from the EU being dumped on their markets.
So called Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) between the European Union and ACP countries would further aggravate this situation, since they aim at opening up markets under the principle of reciprocity and would create Free Trade Areas between some of the world’s richest countries and some of the poorest. Further destruction of farmers’ livelihoods and an increased food insecurity is thus to be expected in such an unfair relationship, with devastating effects for African countries, where agriculture is still the mainstay of the economy with unto 80% of the population depending on farming.


 
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