WTO: 2005 NEWS ITEMS
12 September 2005
DISPUTE SETTLEMENT
WTO opens panel proceeding to public for the first time
Journalists, NGO representatives, scholars and others came Monday to the WTO in Geneva to watch the proceedings of a Dispute Settlement Panel. It is the first time ever a legal proceeding is open for public viewing at the World Trade Organization.
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The public watched the proceedings from a separate room at the WTO headquarters, via closed-circuit broadcast.
The decision was taken by the members of the dispute settlement panel after a request from the parties: Canada, European Communities, United States.
Ambassador Don Stephenson of Canada
said that 搕he closed process leaves the public, even parliamentarians and
interested non-governmental organizations to imagine the worst of the
process, and to question its legitimacy? He added that 揷ountries
presenting reasoned arguments before impartial judges and under
international law...is something that should be celebrated, not hidden
away?
Mr. David Shark of the United States said that his country 揾as been
seeking open panel meetings for quite some time and at each panel meeting
or proceeding that we have participated in, we have proposed this to our
fellow disputants? 揥e are particularly pleased that the panel itself has
taken the decision to open the meeting to the public,?he said.
Mr. Fabian Delcros of the European Communities said it was important that
the public and interested organizations 搒ee that the WTO procedures are
objective, impartial and professional? He added that it was also
important for interested WTO members to be in a position 搕o simply come
here, take note, and see for themselves what's happening?
The proceedings for this meeting of the panel are scheduled to go until 15 September, and they are part of the case 揅ontinued suspension of obligations in the EC — hormones dispute?a dispute brought by the EC against Canada and the US. The panel stage of dispute settlement cases normally takes from six to nine months to complete.
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