Brazil’s Lula Believes Agreement on World Trade Will Happen in a Few Days

Bush receives Brazilian President Lula in Camp David Brazil and the United States expect that in the coming 30 days agreement on the Doha Round global trade talks can be reached, revealed Monday, April 2,  Brazilian president Lula da Silva during his weekly broadcast program.

Last Saturday, March 31, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva met with US President George W Bush at the Camp David retreat and apparently reached some kind of understanding on the stalled World Trade Organization Doha Round talks plus asserting the "strategic" alliance between Brazil and the US in several fields.

"President Bush told the press he wants an agreement at WTO level. He said he was willing to reach such an agreement, and in the meeting with me, he personally insisted that in the coming days we must be ready to agree on the trade deal," said Lula.

The Brazilian president said that this week he will be phoning British Primer Minister Tony Blair and German Premier Angela Merkel, since Germany currently holds the EU presidency, to push for the Doha negotiations.

"If we reach a Doha Round agreement, I think it will be a great achievement, particularly for the poor world since we will be giving them an opportunity to join the XXI century," added Lula.

Last Saturday following the meeting with the Brazilian president, Bush addressing the US press said it was in the interest of the US "that we successfully finish these WTO discussions".

The four main actors of the Doha Round talks, Brazil, India, US and the EU, are scheduled to meet in mid April in New Delhi to find a compromise in agriculture, farming subsidies and markets access.

The Doha Round talks were launched in 2001 but were interrupted last year following disagreements in agriculture. Last January a new round of contacts was started to try and find common ground to proceed with negotiations.

The 150 WTO member countries have until next June 30 to find an understanding since on that date the special negotiations powers of the US Executive, granted by Congress, expire.

Developing countries are demanding for an end to farm subsidies and access to rich countries' markets, while the developed world is asking in exchange openings in services and for manufactured goods.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian TV Crew Beaten Up by Lula’s Party Supporters

Reporters Without Borders expressed indignation after three members of a television crew from privately-owned ...

The view Bush will have from his Hilton suite in São Paulo, Brazil

Bush Won’t See Shacks Brazil Razed But Will Still Have Favela View

Too bad that three families had their shacks set up on the sidewalk of ...

Brazilian Dumond with a Foot in the Middle East

Brazilian footwear brand Dumond, which is owned by the Brazil-based Paquetá group, wants to ...

Bare Flesh Protest

To call attention to their gripe, everything is game for the students: to carry ...

Brazil’s Sugar Cane Harvest Grows 5.7% to 440 Million Tons

Brazil should harvest 440 million tons in the next sugar cane crop. The volume ...

Brazilians Flying 17% More

The passenger movement in Brazilian airports grew 16.84% in the first half of this ...

Brazil to Send 5 Ministers to World Social Forum in Venezuela

The Brazilian government will send no less than five ministers of state to the ...

Brazil’s State-Run Companies Spending Rises 277% with Lula

A report from Brazil’s Department of State-Run Enterprise Coordination and Governance (Dest), which is ...

Brazilian Bras and Panties Go High Tech

The intimate fashion sector including panties and bras is one that grows the most ...

There’s a Coup d’État Underway in Brazil, and We Congressmen Are to Blame

In an interview for Magno Martins’ blog, I responded that, in brief, I could ...