EU asks C. America to select negotiator for trade talks
(Xinhua) Updated: 2006-10-10 14:46
SAN JOSE - EU foreign relations director-general Eneko Landaburu on Monday
urged Central American nations to choose a single negotiator for talks on an
association agreement between the two trade blocs.
"On both sides we need to have one negotiator. Every time we have worked [in]
this way. We have had successful results," Landaburu told reporters at the
opening ceremony of the High Level Central Social and Economic Integration
Forum, which runs from Monday to Tuesday in Costa Rica's capital San Jose.
"In the agreement we all signed in Rome in 2003, both sides agreed one
negotiator [each]," he added.
Landaburu said that a single negotiator did not mean the loss of sovereignty
for the negotiating nations.
He added that it was absolutely necessary if negotiations were to conclude by
2008.
Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, who also attended the Forum, said he did
not agree. "I have already said on various occasions that the attempt to have
one negotiator for Central America is unacceptable."
Costa Rica does not accept the agreement signed in June by the presidents of
Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Panama, to designate Nicaragua's
Foreign Minister Norman Caldera as the single negotiator for the trade talks
with the EU.
Arias was also critical of the EU's high agricultural subsidies, which he
said were a barrier to interregional trade.
In 2005, Central America exported goods worth 2.21 billion U.S. dollars to
the EU and imported goods worth 3.22 billion dollars, according to statistics
released by the Central American Integration System.
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