Africa Cheers Brazilian Win Against US on Cotton Subsidies

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, yesterday visited Gabon, where he met with the vice-Minister of Foreign Relations, Jean François Ndongon.

They discussed the progress of cooperation projects approved during President Lula’s visit to the country in 2004.


“We also talked about scholarships, Portuguese language instruction, and exchanges of diplomats,” Amorim commented.


Today, in Kenya, the Minister participated in the closing ceremony of a meeting of the World Trade Organization (WTO).


Ministers representing 35 developing countries were present at the encounter in Mombassa, the country’s second largest city, after the capital, Nairobi.


They insisted on deadlines for the definition of the mathematical formulas that will facilitate the exportation of agricultural and industrial products.


The confirmation of Brazil’s victory in the WTO over American cotton subsidies was one of the most discussed and celebrated topics at the meeting.


“We accompanied the whole dispute. We are very happy with the outcome,” said Benin’s ambassador to the organization, Samuel Amehou.


According to Amehou, around 15 million people in Africa depend on cotton production.


Chancellor Amorim hopes that the elimination of American subsidies goes into effect soon and that African countries that export cotton will also receive the benefits.


The “mini-Ministerial” encounter, as it was called, was intended to emphasize the understandings initiated at the Doha Round, in Qatar, in 2002, in order to smooth out differences and foster consensual positions for the VI WTO Ministerial Conference, which will be held in Hong Kong in December.


The principal themes were agriculture, market access, trade in services and trade protection rules, and sustained regional development, among others.


According to Minister Amorim, relations between Brazil and Kenya have converged mainly around interests in international trade and the environment.


Amorim’s visit is meant to reinforce the coordination that exists, through the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding over Political Consultations, and to strengthen cooperation in the spheres of health, agriculture, and trade.


From Kenya, the Brazilian Chancellor will proceed on March 8 to Ethiopia, where he will discuss ways to create closer ties between Brazil, the Mercosur and the African Union, which is headquartered in Addis Ababa, capital of Ethiopia.


On March 9 and 10, Minister Amorim will follow a schedule of official commitments in Mozambique. Then he will travel to Capetown, South Africa, where he will participate in the 2nd Meeting of the Mixed Trilateral Commission of the IBSA – India-Brazil-South Africa Dialogue, on March 10 and 11.


The agenda for the meeting includes strengthening cooperation among the three countries.


Translation: David Silberstein
Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Police Visit Brazilian Mall on Opening Day. 70% of Products Were Pirated

A new shopping mall catering to electronics buyers just opened last Friday, September 15, ...

Brazil President Hints He Might Choose a Woman to Succeed Him

The president of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, said he would be choosing ...

Brazil: Lula’s Great China Trip

Chinese Ambassador to Brazil Jiang Yuande believes business transactions between China and Brazil are ...

Libya leader Muammar Abu Minyar al-QADHAFI, Col

Libya Sends Its Prime Minister to Brazil to Do Business

The prime minister of Libya, El-Baghdadi Ali El-Mahmoudi, will pay a visit to Brazil ...

A Book on Brazil’s Recession, Corruption and Inequality

Marcos Mendes’ Inequality, Democracy and Growth in Brazil: A Country at the Crossroads of ...

Brazilian Consumers Confidence in the Economy Is Up by 4%

Brazil's Consumer Confidence Index (ICC) rose 4.1% in June, increasing from 102.2 points, in ...

Brazil’s Leader in Kids Clothes Conquers Europe

Considered one of the greatest and most important garment industries in Brazil, Marisol, based ...

Cigarette Kills 200,000 Brazilians a Year

The World Health Organization (WHO) regards smoking as a global health problem and the ...

On the Shores of Brazil’s Sea of Mud There Are Pleasant Gardens

Despite the political crisis, Brazil is doing OK. It could be better, but it ...

Despite Opposition There’s Strong Lobby in Brazil to Accept Venezuela in Mercosur

Former president of Brazil and current president of the Brazilian senate José Sarney reiterated ...