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TWN Info Service on Free
Trade Agreements
26 January 2007
Thai Human Rights Commission Criticises FTA with US
In what is believed to be the first ever human rights impact assessment
of a US FTA conducted at national level, the National Human Rights Commission
of Thailand in a draft report concludes that the FTA that Thailand has
been negotiating with the United States will violate the human rights
of Thai people and affect the country's sovereignty.
It suggests that negotiations should not resume until a thorough review
of its impact is undertaken. Talks have been put on hold after the last
round in January 2006 which saw thousands of people from a wide section
of the population protesting in the streets and disrupting the meeting.
The Commission based its findings on a human rights assessment of a
leaked text of the intellectual property chapter proposed by the US
as well as on other chapters of the FTA based on the texts of other
bilateral deals signed by the US.
The article below provides further details of the Commission’s report.
It is reproduced with permission of South-North Development Monitor
(SUNS).
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Thai Human Rights Commission attacks FTA with US
(South-North Development Monitor, Issue# 6176, 25 January 2007)
Kuala Lumpur, 24 Jan (Sanya Smith) -- The free trade agreement that
Thailand has been negotiating with the United States will violate the
human rights of Thai people and affect the country's sovereignty; thus
negotiations should not resume until a thorough review of its impact
is undertaken.
This was the conclusion of a draft report of the National Human Rights
Commission of Thailand, a body established by the Thai Constitution.
The 11 members of the Commission, chaired by Professor Saneh Chamarik,
were elected by the Thai Senate.
The draft report was presented for discussion at a seminar on "Free
Trade Agreements: Impact on Human Rights" on 17-19 January in Bangkok, organized by the Commission in partnership
with several United Nations agencies. It was attended by 150 human rights
experts, policy makers and NGO leaders.
The report is believed to be the first-ever human rights impact assessment
of a US
free trade agreement (FTA) conducted at national level. An international
human rights expert attending the seminar commented that it could serve
as a model for similar assessments in other countries.
The negotiations for a Thai-US FTA are currently on hold. According
to Assistant US Trade Representative Barbara Weisel, "Negotiations
with Thailand
have been suspended. We have said publicly that we would be interested
in renewing negotiations with Thailand
when a democratic government is in place."
The Commission based its findings on a human rights assessment of a
leaked text of the intellectual property chapter proposed by the US
as well as on other chapters of the FTA based on the texts of other
bilateral deals signed by the US.
Among those interviewed by the Commission were the Chairman of the committee
formulating FTA strategies and the head of the negotiating team.
The Commission studied possible human rights violations in the following
areas: agriculture, environment, intellectual property, services and
investment and their impact on the right to development, socioeconomic
and cultural rights, community rights, the right to access resource
bases, the right to access drugs and public health services. All these
rights are guaranteed and protected under the 1997 Thai Constitution.
The report noted that "the results of the FTA negotiations may
lead to significant changes in the development strategies and the people's
way of life and impact options for development."
The Commission found that existing USFTAs have obliged the countries
signing them to "accept the US demands that
are of a uniform standard with respect to intellectual property, investment
liberalization, the environment, etc., all of which have impacted people's
livelihood and national sovereignty."
The Commission also pointed out the lack of disclosure to the public
and failure to allow the public or the Thai Parliament to participate.
In its strongest criticism of the FTA negotiations, the Commission's
draft report said: "The fact that Thailand
is on the receiving end with the United States unilaterally making
a 'take it or leave it' proposal, any negotiation could not possibly
be conducted on equal footing. This is inconsistent with the principle
of negotiations between two states of equally recognized and respected
sovereignty in the world community.
"Thus, accepting all the terms and conditions imposed by the United States would amount to recognizing the US sovereignty
over our own, i. e., recognizing or acting in compliance with US laws
when they are inconsistent with Thai laws, e. g., the Patent Law."
It added that being compelled to change a number of Thai laws to be
compatible with the US
law "will amount to Thailand's
administrative, legislative and judicial sovereignty being violated
indirectly. Thai courts will also have to indirectly enforce the US law."
The Commission found that "an FTA is like a tsunami that crashes
to the shore without warning when one is not prepared to deal with it."
It goes on to note that both the Thai Government and its entrepreneurs
are not sufficiently prepared.
The Commission highlighted that tariffs on agricultural, forestry, fishery
and processed food products were higher in Thailand
than in the US, and
the elimination of tariffs on both sides would cause Thailand
to have to reduce its tariffs by much more than the US.
It also expressed concern that as long as the US continues its farm subsidies, Thai
products will still have difficulty competing. Speaking at the Bangkok seminar, Mr. Felipe Frydman, the Argentine Ambassador
to Thailand, said
that in Mercosur's USFTA negotiations as part of the Free Trade Area
of the Americas (FTAA), the US refused to negotiate the reduction
of its agricultural subsidies, saying that it could only be done at
the WTO.
Mr. Frydman explained that the US refusal to
commit to reforms of its antidumping law in negotiations with Mercosur,
together with its refusal to lower its agricultural subsidies, were
the reasons Mercosur refused to put government procurement, services
and intellectual property on the table in the FTAA.
The Commission noted with concern the experience of Mexican corn farmers
under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) who went bankrupt
because they could not compete with the heavily subsidised US farmers. (According
to recent reports, 2 million Mexican farmers have lost their livelihoods
due to cheap imports).
The Commission stated that "negative consequences may be inevitable"
especially for Thai farmers of products also grown in the US, for example,
soya beans, maize, potato, peanuts, cows and pigs. These Thai farmers
"may be forced to abandon farming and seek new occupations elsewhere,
for they will not be able to compete with the cheaper farm products
imported from the United
States."
With respect to the environment chapter of the proposed USFTA, some
of the negative impacts that the Commission highlighted were that stronger
environmental protection may make it harder for Thai manufacturers to
compete and that the US may use the environmental provisions as "a
pretext to justify its decision to legally impose protectionist measures."
The Commission noted that simultaneously, the US demands in other USFTA
chapters such as for stronger investment and intellectual property protection
"may prevent Thailand from acting in full compliance with the obligations
specified in the multilateral environment agreements to which Thailand
is a party if they are considered inconsistent with any conditions or
provisions in the FTA".
In particular, "If the environmental protection measures are enforced
on foreign investors, they will be interpreted as indirect seizure of
property. Action may then be taken against the government and such measures
may be prohibited." The Commission goes on to state that "This
may place Thailand in a vulnerable position, likely to be charged with
violation or failure to honour the commitments under international laws
to which Thailand is a party".
In its investigation of the intellectual property chapter, the Commission
focused on its impact on public health and farmers' rights. The Commission
charted the history of US
pressure on Thailand
to increase its intellectual property protection and the protests against
such a move by academics, public health officials and NGOs.
The report also explains demands made by the US that go beyond the WTO's TRIPS
Agreement. These TRIPS-plus provisions include: the patenting of plants,
animals and methods of treatment; patent term extensions beyond the
20 years required by TRIPS; data exclusivity; linkage of patent status
and medicine registration; prohibition on patent pre-grant opposition;
and limitations on the use of compulsory licences. These last two have
been recently successfully used in Thailand to ensure
access to medicines used to treat AIDS.
The Commission highlighted research that showed that in Thailand the price
of branded/originator medicines can be ten times higher than the generic
version. It concluded: "The impact on the market monopoly will
be that the costs of drugs will be too expensive or beyond the purchasing
power of people.
"On top of this, the estimated increase of expenses over 100,000
million Baht, more than the annual budget for public health, will definitely
undermine any earnest attempt to manage the health system in Thailand, particularly the health
insurance scheme... In the final analysis, the people in Thailand will
be denied access to drugs, causing endless public health and social
problems."
Strongly attacking the US
demands on intellectual property, the Commission said that they "clearly
reflect the greed on part of pharmaceutical corporations expressed through
the strong position taken by the US
negotiation team, which tried in every possible way to gain the most
from it..."
"Doing so would amount to undermining the universal health care
system and popular health insurance scheme and destroying the chances
for Thailand to develop
its own potentials in this pharmaceutical field and to be self-reliant
in manufacturing and distribution of quality pharmaceutical products
at reasonable price."
The report notes that the provision to expand the scope of patent protection
to cover all categories of living organisms will be an important US demand. Implementing
this would require amendments to the Thai Patent Act and its sui generis
Plant Varieties Protection Act which was designed to suit Thailand's socioeconomic
conditions.
Accepting these US
demands would "affect farmers' access to plant and animal varieties
because prices may increase under the restrictions and prohibitions
of the patent law system," stated the report.
In addition, the US'
demands that Thailand
sign the 1991 International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties
of Plants (UPOV) will lead "to unfairness in the exploitation of
Thai plant varieties and will impact farmers' rights, and pose barriers
to conservation and the sustainable exploitation of biological resources,"
says the Commission.
It added that provisions that prohibit farmers from collecting the seeds
of patented plant varieties for use in the next farming season or from
exchanging plant varieties with neighbours or other communities for
the purpose of selection for breeding are all "contrary to well
established Thai tradition."
The report said that if Thailand
has to implement the animal and plant patent system or protection of
plant varieties under the UPOV in compliance with US demands, it will
jeopardize Thailand's economic
rights and the rights of future plant and animal development. Thailand would
also not be able to implement the requirements of the Convention on
Biological Diversity as these would be inconsistent with provisions
concerning the protection of patents of living organisms.
As regards the services chapter, the Commission noted that due to the
negative list system in USFTAs (whereby everything is liberalized unless
it is listed) and their MFN provisions in the services chapters, unless
Thailand lists it
as an exception, the GATS-plus liberalisation it has done, for example,
in the ASEAN framework, will have to be extended to the US.
It concludes that "Hence, caution should be taken on this issue
as well."
The Commission had a number of concerns with respect to the standard
USFTA investment chapter. These included the broad definition of investment
and investor, pre-establishment rights, free transfer of capital, expropriation,
prohibited performance requirements, and investor-state dispute settlement.
Among the Commission's many recommendations in the report are that:
-- All sectors of society should be involved in the negotiating process
and the matter must go through Parliament.
-- Thailand
should delay the negotiations for the time being to be able to carefully
scrutinize important issues. FTA negotiations with every country should
be suspended for a one-year period during the administration of the
current temporary government, because the negotiations and the signing
of FTAs will be legally binding on Thailand in the long term.
-- On matters relating to medicines and public health services, the
government must adhere to the principles of the rights of patients and
consumers, and self-reliance in terms of drugs and public health. If
the US demands impact on health condition and access
to drugs and public health services, they must be rejected without being
compared to benefits offered by the US.
-- As every person has fundamental rights to good health, the issue
of IPR protection relating to drugs and public health services should
not be considered in the bilateral trade negotiations. This can be compared
with the US not agreeing
to include its agricultural subsidies on the agenda.
-- Thailand should
not accept the US
demands on the issue of plant and animal protection under the patent
system but insist on WTO members' rights to deny patent protection for
plants and animals. There is also no need to cover plant variety protection
under the UPOV Convention or the patent system.
-- Thailand
should review the definition of the broad scope of investment protection,
which includes intellectual protection. Services markets should be opened
only in sectors where competition is beneficial to the country.
-- The draft text of the FTAs and the substance of the negotiations
should be disclosed. Any negotiations should be considered from the
perspective of all parts of Thai society and not just some economic
sectors.
-- The government should establish an independent committee to review
Thailand's FTA
policies. It should consider the impacts of FTAs already signed by Thailand
and study negotiations that are in progress. The appraisal should cover
economic, social, cultural and environmental dimensions. Public hearings
should be organized.
-- The government should expedite the passing of the International Agreement
Negotiations Act to be used as a legal framework in future negotiations.
It should cover negotiation procedures, components of the negotiating
team, democratic and parliamentary participation, review of pre-negotiation
preparations, plans for production restructuring, plans to cope with
the impacts of FTAs, public hearings and an impact assessment to be
approved by the Parliament prior to negotiations, and FTAs are required
to be approved by the Parliament before signing.
-- The Constitution should be amended by stipulating that a public hearing
be held and every person has the right to vote on the signing of an
international trade agreement or an international treaty which will
impact the country. +
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