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Cotonou Agreement Programme for Workers’ Activities (ACTRAV) Trade Union Report: ETUC, ICFTU & WCL
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Cotonou Agreement n A New Agreement at a Turning Point in History –Signed 23rd June 2000 for 20 years
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Three Core Objectives ¶Reducing and eventually eradicating poverty in the ACP countries; ·Sustainable development; and ¸Gradual integration of the ACP countries into the world economy.
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Fundamental Principles of the New Agreement n Equality of the partners and the ACP States’ sovereign right to set their priorities and development strategies; n Participation by civil society organisations as partners in the agreement; n Pivotal role of political dialogue on all aspects of the EU/ACP partnership and the fulfilment of mutual obligations assumed by the parties; and n Differentiation between the least-developed and other ACP countries, and encouragement for the formation of regional economic groupings of ACP countries.
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Institution n The ACP/EU Council of Ministers n The Committee of Ambassadors n The Joint parliamentary Assembly
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Areas of Support 1) Economic development, trade co-operation (Article 21.1) 2) Social and human development (Article 25.1) 3) Regional Co-operation and integration 4) Thematic and cross-cutting issues (Article 33.3) - Gender issues, particularly promoting, building the capacity and role of women; - Sustainable management of natural resources and environmental protection; and - Institutional development & capacity building for ACP States
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Progress and Strengths of the Cotonou Agreement (1) rTransparency as a principle of development co- operation and the basis of accountable governance; rParticipation by non-state actors in all areas of co-operation; rsustainable social and human development as a priority focus of co-operation; rFundamental social rights as an integral part of growth and/or economic development; and
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rRegional integration as a strategic priority to foster the closer integration of the ACP countries into the world market; rDecentralised co-operation; and rThe supply of technical assistance only on request by ACP countries Progress and Strengths of the Cotonou Agreement (2)
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More Rapid and Flexible Procedures for Accessing Financial Resources n The Agreement’s general frame of reference has been extended to include “relevant conventions of the ILO (Preamble to the Cotonou Agreement); n The concern to keep social rights and fundamental labour standards very much to the fore in economic and trade co-operation practise through express references to the ILO Conventions No. 87, No. 98, No. 105, No. 182, No. 111 (Article 50)
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Weakness of the Cotonou Agreement n Nowhere does the Agreement mention the EU’s interests in pursuing co-operation with the ACP countries (“recipients” and “donors” ); n The shift from a development co-operation agreement to a free trade agreement; n Ambivalence on the protection of democracy and peace;
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Trade Union Demands n Setting up machinery to give all players a real say in project and programme design, programming, implementation and evaluation. Trade unions repeat their call for a tripartite, national or regional co-operation programme management committee to be set up in each ACP State and/or region. n The trade union movement stands by its believe that there can be no real development without observance of fundamental social and labour rights.
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Co-operation Strategy (CS) n Joint document prepared by the ACP State and the EU “following consultations with a wide range of actors in the development process (Article 2. Annex IV) Analyses: the country’s political, economic and social context, its constraints, capacities and prospects, including an assessment of basic needs; Details: the country’s medium-term development strategy, priorities, financing requirements and any contributions (ACP State, EU, other donors active in the country); Defines: the most appropriate support mechanisms to be applied in implementing the development strategies worked out.
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National Indicative Programme (NIP) n Document drown by the ACP State to: –Specify the focal (priority) areas on which EU indicative financial support should be concentrated in response to the country’s co-operation strategy; –Present the most appropriate measures and operations, and the allocation of financial resources reserved for projects and programmes in and outside the focus areas for support; –Identify the eligible non-governmental actors and the indicative resources allocated to them. n Trade unions and civil society organizations must ensure that they are fully involved in drawing up these documents
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What do you do? n Trade unions must: –Find out about consultation dates and deadlines, national development priorities, the methods and procedures for participation in national programming; –Focus on the social aspect of national development programmes, get decentralised co-operation included in focal areas on which aid is concentrated, and see that national economic guidelines take the vital role of social actors into account.
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Where to Get the Information From? (1) è The Government (National Authorising Officer, or the Ministry with responsibility for international co- operation or national planning) è The European Commission’s Delegation in the country
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n Ask to be involved in consultations and national programming, referring to the Cotonou Agreement n Ask for a tripartite consultation committee to be set up, with members representing the ACP state, the EU Delegation and civil society n Thoroughly prepare their input into the national programming activities: òIdentify the specific areas to focus on when finalising the Co- operation Strategy and the National Indicative Programme; òFrame workable programmes and projects in line with the eligibility criteria and eligible areas; and òMake sure they are keeping within the set deadlines. Where to Get the Information From? (2)
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If Allowed to Participate, What to Emphasise? n Social aspects in national programming, decentralised co-operation; n Social actor involvement in setting the economic guidelines of the CS and NIP; and n The social impacts of deregulation and trade liberalisation plus alternative measures and policies.
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If Not Allowed to Participate, What to Do? n Notify the international trade union of which you are a member (ICFTU, WCL) n Protest in writing to the ACP State and the EU delegation in the country, referring to the provisions of the Agreement.
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Fact Sheet (1) n Actors responsible for implementing the Agreement n Actors in all areas of co-operation n Decentralised co-operation and micro- projects n Preparing project packages and application appraisal
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Fact Sheet (2) n Economic and trade co-operation n Main stages in the negotiation and implementation of new ACP/EU trade agreements n Debt and Structural Adjustment n The unions and political dialogue
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Thank You All and Good Luck! actrav Remember, Rome was not built in a day, and opposition will come in your way.
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