From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


FEATURE: Central American Lutheran Churches Warn Trade Pact


From "Frank Imhoff" <Frank.Imhoff@elca.org>
Date Sat, 06 Aug 2005 07:49:41 -0500

FEATURE: Central American Lutheran Churches Warn Trade Pact with USA
Threatens Sovereignty
DR-CAFTA Will Increase Poverty, Undermine Indigenous People's Rights

MANAGUA, Nicaragua/GENEVA, 6 August 2005 (LWI) - Lutheran churches in
Central America warn that a free trade agreement with the United States
of America poses a threat to the region's most disenfranchised people,
and are calling for broader consultation before any such deal goes into
effect.

Prior to the US Senate's approval of the pact June 30, followed by the
July 28 House of Representatives' endorsement by a narrow margin, the
Nicaraguan Lutheran Church of Faith and Hope had voiced its opposition
to the Dominican Republic-Central American Free Trade Agreement
(DR-CAFTA). The DR-CAFTA, the church argued, would only benefit large US
businesses and the 10 percent of Nicaraguans who control 85 percent of
the country's wealth, perpetuating "the system of poverty, hunger,
malnutrition and dehumanization in which we live ... so that every day
the number of poor people increases and the rich become richer."

The June statement by the Nicaraguan church is one of several issued in
recent months by the region's Lutheran churches over the free trade
agreement, previously referred to as CAFTA, as it originally included
the USA and the Central American countries of Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. When the Dominican Republic joined
the negotiations in 2004, the pact adopted its current name, DR-CAFTA.

The Lutheran Costarican Church warned that DR-CAFTA would threaten the
environment and jeopardize the livelihood of small farmers and other
workers, eroding labor rights, creating unstable employment, and
stripping away benefits such as social security, pensions and maternity
protection that had been secured only after years of struggle.

Small-Scale Farmers and Businesses, Women Workers Especially Affected

Women, who make up a large percentage of the work force in small and
medium-size businesses, will be especially affected, and the trade
agreement will undermine the rights of Indigenous People, the Costa
Rican church said.

Like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), DR-CAFTA would
pose a particular threat to small farmers, who will be unable to compete
with cheaper, subsidized agricultural products flooding into the region
from the USA. The Nicaraguan church warned of the danger of this unfair
competition and the threat of the privatization of natural resources,
including water and bio-diversity, which would undermine food security
and increase migration from rural areas to cities as farmers find it
impossible to earn a livelihood.

Another area of concern for the region's churches is DR-CAFTA's impact
on health, especially access to affordable medicines. By extending
patent periods, the pact would raise the cost of critical medications,
such as those for persons living with HIV/AIDS.

"When there is an ethical conflict between the pharmaceutical industry's
trade rights and the people's right to health, our choice is very clear
-- we always choose life," the Lutheran churches of Costa Rica, El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua said in a joint statement
issued May 13, during an HIV/AIDS regional consultation for Lutheran
churches in Central America.

The DR-CAFTA was signed by negotiators from Costa Rica, the Dominican
Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and USA in May
2004, after just 16 months of negotiation. The parliaments of El
Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras have ratified it, but ratification
votes are still pending in Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic and
Nicaragua. For the free trade agreement to come into effect, it still
must be approved by the parliaments of the other parties to the
agreement. But it is not a treaty, therefore not legally binding.

Churches Urged to Study, Preach about Agreement's Implications

One criticism has been that little information about the pact was made
public during the negotiations. In a statement issued in May, Costa
Rica's Lutheran church called for open debate about the agreement "to
incorporate a concept of greater solidarity that benefits the great
majority of people ... and is conducive to an improvement in the lives
of the poor."

It also urged churches to study and preach on the implications of the
free trade agreement from a faith perspective of justice and peace. The
Lutheran church stressed the need to accompany grassroots organizations
as they mobilize in search of a more just form of human development.
Such action should include collaboration with other churches in the
region and calls for the solidarity of North American churches,
"informing them of the consequences of the free trade agreement for both
peoples through visits and campaigns," and seeking their assistance in
lobbying the US Congress to reject the pact.

In its statement, the Costa Rican church said, "We express our total
opposition to the policies that the agreement attempts to establish in
Costa Rica and other countries, as they will have a negative impact on
peace and national sovereignty." (793 words)

(By Barbara J. Fraser, Lima (Peru)-based freelance journalist.)

(The LWF is a global communion of Christian churches in the Lutheran
tradition. Founded in 1947 in Lund, Sweden, the LWF currently has 138
member churches in 77 countries all over the world, with a total
membership of nearly 66 million. The LWF acts on behalf of its member
churches in areas of common interest such as ecumenical and inter-faith
relations, theology, humanitarian assistance, human rights,
communication, and the various aspects of mission and development work.
Its secretariat is located in Geneva, Switzerland.)

[Lutheran World Information (LWI) is the LWF's information service.
Unless specifically noted, material presented does not represent
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