| Wto opens talks with libya Original Source Link: (May no longer be active) http://edition.cnn.com/2004/BUSINESS/07/27/wto.geneva/http://edition.cnn.com/2004/BUSINESS/07/27/wto.geneva/
WTO 'opens talks with Libya'
GENEVA, Switzerland -- The World Trade Organization has agreed to start talks with Libya on its possible entry into the 147-nation body, according to reports.
The decision was taken by the WTO's executive General Council on Tuesday, Reuters quoted trade officials as saying. The move marks a new step in Libya's efforts to normalize relations with the international community.
"They have agreed to set up a working party," one official emerging from the council session said.
Establishing a working party is the first step on the road to entry for any country seeking to join the WTO.
The WTO is meeting in Geneva this week amid hopes it will reach an agreement that will bring developing nations into line with the world's trading system.
The last time the WTO reached a major agreement was 10 years ago in Marrakech. Since then, talks collapsed in Seattle in 1999 amid scenes of rioting by anti-globalization protesters.
They also collapsed in Cancun, Mexico last year, when developing countries took issue with Europe and the United States over subsidies.
The current series of talks began in Doha, Qatar, with the main aim of helping developing countries build their own farm trade. The problem is how to get everyone to agree.
"It's very, very challenging. I mean the negotiations are probably covering the broadest scope they have done ever inside the WTO," says Ross Denton of Baker & Mackenzie.
"And of course you've got more members -- 147 members. And you've also got each of these individual members now asserting themselves and saying they won't agree to any package they don't like."
The European Union has proposed ending its subsidies of exports provided the United States ends its credits on exports.
Among the trade ministers expected in Geneva this week are the EU's Pascal Lamy and his U.S. counterpart, Robert Zoellick, Reuters said.
But economists say it's not just the traditional EU-U.S. divisions that could pose problems -- there are also new divisions opening up in the developing world.
Brazil's Foreign Minister Celso Amorim and India's Trade Minister Kamal Nath, whose countries are leaders of the G20 developing country alliance, also is expected in Geneva, Reuters said.
The important thing is for the WTO to keep the Doha talks alive until the next major conference in Hong Kong next year. The WTO says it's confident some kind of agreement will be reached by its Friday deadline.
"If this meeting succeeds, it means Doha is back on track and it will probably survive all the political changes that are taking place in Washington and in Brussels," says Simon Cox of The Economist.
"If it fails, then people will really start to wonder whether the WTO system will work."
CNN's Meara Erdozain contributed to this report.
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