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Seychelles defends interests at ACP and ACP-EU Ministerial Meetings |04 May 2016

Seychelles has defended its interests on a wide range of issues from climate change and fisheries to trade, financing for development and small island developing states among numerous other subjects of concern to the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States.

The 41st Joint ACP-EU Council of Ministers closed on May 29 in Dakar, Senegal, after two days of deliberations. The meeting was preceded by the 103rd session of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) Council of Ministers.  

Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Ambassador Barry Faure, representing Foreign Affairs Minister Joel Morgan, said the meetings presented an opportunity for Seychelles to defend its interests on a wide range of issues from climate change and fisheries to trade, financing for development and Sids (Small Island Developing States), among numerous other subjects of concern to the ACP.

The main focus of the ACP council was to prepare for the 8th Summit of the ACP Heads of State and government scheduled to take place in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, from May 31 to June 1, 2016, under the theme ‘Repositioning the ACP Group to respond to the challenges of Sustainable Development’.

With regard to ACP-EU relations Post 2020, Ambassador Faure pointed out the need to develop a more robust and prosperous cooperation framework, with the aim of promoting sustainable development for the benefit of all ACP states, irrespective of size, geographic location and development status. The Port Moresby Summit will thus be an historic opportunity for our Heads of State and government to reset the ACP Group after 2020.

During the Joint ACP-EU Council, Seychelles called on the EU to resume the ESA-EU Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) negotiations which had stalled since 2011. Given the lack of new market access offers from the Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) region, the European Commission (EC) has been insisting on a critical mass of market access offers before full EPA negotiations can resume, whereas the ESA Council has communicated to the EC its decision to allow interim EPA countries (Madagascar, Mauritius, Seychelles and Zimbabwe) to proceed to negotiate for a deeper and broader interim EPA. It is expected that talks with the EC would finally resume on a new footing in the near future.

On a brighter note, the Joint ACP-EU Council adopted a Seychelles proposal for the Intra ACP Work Programme 2016-2017 to include a study to define a Vulnerability and Resilience Index which was one of the outcomes of the Third International Conference on Sids in Samoa, in December 2014. The study is expected to feed into a new and more favourable mechanism that the EC has proposed, in replacement of the Vulnerability Flex mechanism, to help ACP states that are affected by exogenous shocks to their economies, to include additional factors like natural disasters and the drop in food prices.

Seychelles also took part in the Development Finance Ministerial Committee where it pushed for a study on innovative financing to be initiated by the ACP at the earliest, in view of the need to implement the Addis Ababa Action Agenda (AAAA) – a global framework for financing development post-2015 – and the need to deliver on the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals.

On fisheries, Seychelles added its voice and pen to a Fisheries Resolution adopted by the ACP Council, to ensure among other things, that  consideration be given to fisheries as one of the climate-sensitive areas under the 11th European Development (EDF) Intra-ACP Indicative Programme that the issues regarding fisheries subsidies and Special and Differential Treatment, which failed to be taken up during the 10th WTO Ministerial Council held in Nairobi in December 2015, are effectively pursued and included in the Post-Nairobi work programme.

Seychelles’ delegation to the ACP meetings also comprised Seychelles Ambassador to the EU in Brussels, Selby Pillay.

 

 

 

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