Deadlocked WTO fails to agree on appointing interim head

Published August 1, 2020
The WTO could be left with nobody at the helm if the global trade body fails to find a replacement before Director-General Roberto Azevedo (pictured) steps down at the end of August. — File
The WTO could be left with nobody at the helm if the global trade body fails to find a replacement before Director-General Roberto Azevedo (pictured) steps down at the end of August. — File

GENEVA: The beleague­red World Trade Organi­sation said its members failed to agree on Friday on appointing one of the four deputy directors-general as an inte­rim chief — underlining the deadlock in the institution.

Already engulfed in multiple crises, the WTO could be left with nobody at the helm if the global trade body fails to find a replacement before Director-General Roberto Azevedo steps down at the end of August.

The stand-off comes with the WTO already mired in hopelessly-stalled trade neg­o­ti­ations and surging trade tensions between the United States and China — and as the world faces a devastating global economic downturn sparked by the coronavirus pandemic.

“We were not able to get a consensus,” WTO spokesman Keith Rockwell told a press conference.

“The frustration would come from the inability to obtain consensus on ... an administrative job that would last a few months.”

In a surprise move in mid-May, Brazilian career diplomat Azevedo announced he was ending his second four-year term 12 months early at the end of August for personal reasons.

According to WTO guidelines, one of the organisation’s four deputy chiefs should be chosen to hold the reins until the next director-general can take over.

The deputy DGs are Yonov Frederick Agah of Nig­e­ria, Karl Brauner of Germany, Yi Xiaozhun of Chi­na and Alan Wolff of the United States. The first thr­ee have been in post since 2013, Wolff since 2017.

But there are eight candidates in all vying to replace Azevedo.

They will be whittled down to five and then two, in a process based on consensus which is expected to last until mid-November.

What should have been a straightforward process has been complicated by US “politicisation”, a diplomatic source lamented.

The WTO’s General Council began discussing the issue last week, and most expected a quick decision, but were caught by surprise when the United States turned it into a “political issue”, a Geneva-based trade diplomat told AFP on Thursday.

When delegates told General Council chairman David Walker which deputy they wanted to take over temporarily, “the things that they pointed to were nationality, experience and the duties they carried out”, Rockwell said Friday.

“It’s not a surprise that politics might be part of this process.” Speaking to the membership, Azevedo said it was disappointing that they were unable to decide on an acting director-general, said Rockwell.

Published in Dawn, August 1st, 2020

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