Wamkele Mene |
The implementation of the African Continental Free Trade
Area (AfCFTA) is unlikely to take place before early next year, Wamkele Mene,
Secretary-General of the AfCFTA said on Friday, after the disruption caused by
the new coronavirus made the current July 1 deadline unworkable.
Wamkele Mene, a South African diplomat who was last year elected the first scribe of the continental free trade area, told Reuters that while only the heads of state
of the 55-member AfCFTA could sanction changes to the deadlines, the cancelled
summit between leaders planned for May in South Africa left few options.
“It is only after the summit that you can say we have a new
trading date. The next opportunity of a summit is on 2 January 2021,” Mene
said.
The continental free-trade zone would, if successful, become
the largest since the creation of the World Trade Organization in 1994,
stitching 1.3 billion people together in a $3.4 trillion economic bloc.
Mene’s role is effectively chief adviser to government
leaders, who hold the exclusive right to approve all parts of the deal and its
implementation.
He has advised them to defer the July 1 implementation
deadline due to the extraordinary circumstances.
It would have required nations to liberalize at least 97% of
their tariff lines and 90% of imports. Mene is instead advising them to allow
free movement of goods, despite borders being closed to human traffic as part
of virus containment efforts, and to allow zero duties on 40 specific goods
that would help combat the virus, such as soap, disinfectant and personal
protective gear.
“The current circumstances simply are not conducive to the
comprehensive trade we had imagined,” he said.
On the advice of the African Centre for Disease Control, the
final phase of in-person trade negotiations were halted in March. This cut off
two months of crunch-time talks over technical details that would have seen
hundreds of negotiators spending 17-hour days passing thousands of documents
back and forth, whilst translating between the bloc’s four official languages.
Moving these discussions online, Mene said, is unrealistic.
“The technical difficulties are immense,” he said. “I’m not
convinced…that doing them over video conference is feasible.”
He said efforts would be redoubled once negotiators could
meet in person, and that African leaders are fully committed to the deal.
“What this pandemic has done is underscore the imperative of
this objective. When you are overly reliant on a particular trade partner, you
are vulnerable,” he said. “The pandemic is slowing us down, but I think this is
going to happen.”
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