Seychelles to become a member of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) came to an end yesterday when the island nation’s Minister for Finance Trade and Investment Pierre Laporte signed the accession protocol.
The signing ceremony followed the approval of the Seychelles’ accession package, including the accession protocol by WTO’s General Council in Geneva, Switzerland, at its last meeting for this year.
This means the Indian Ocean archipelago of 115 islands, with a population of around 90,000 people, will officially become the 161st member of the WTO, 30 days after the ratification by the National Assembly of its accession protocol.
According to a press statement issued by the Ministry of Finance, Trade and Investment (MFTI) the ratification is expected to be completed by latest, in the first quarter of 2015.
Describing the step as a historic day for Seychelles and its people Minister Laporte said the WTO membership will bring several benefits to the country. He noted that reforms that had to be undertaken during the accession process have helped bring the country’s laws and policies at par with best international standards.
“Our private sector has already began to reap the benefits of a more predictable and transparent trading system. Seychelles now has a platform which provides the country, as a small island nation, with an equal opportunity as its large counterparts to make its voice heard on trade issues,” said Laporte in the statement.
Guidance of country’s leaders recognised
Addressing the WTO’s General Council in Geneva, Laporte also paid tribute to what he described as the “crucial leadership and guidance” of the Seychelles President James Michel to the process as well as the role of the country’s Vice President Danny Faure, who was the finance minister when the country first embarked on its IMF-assisted economic reform programme in 2008.
According to the MFTI statement the Director General of the WTO, Roberto Azevedo also recognised “Michel’s leadership in pursuing WTO membership and undertaking the far-reaching reforms have made it possible for Seychelles to conclude the accession negotiations successfully.”
Currently, the WTO’s membership of 160 member states accounts for over 97 percent of the world’s total trade.
The process of becoming a WTO member is unique to each applicant country, but takes an average of about five years for most nations.
Seychelles initially requested membership to the WTO on May 31, 1995, and made very little progress up until it re-initiated the process in 2008.
One of the main challenges Seychelles faced was the limited expertise and experience within its national institutions in trade negotiations and in general and multilateral negotiations in particular.
Since 2008, the government made a significant amount of progress to identify the required legislative changes. By 2010, Seychelles had submitted offers in both Goods and Services, and also established a Working Party on July 11, 1995.
The island nation has completed bilateral trade negotiations with nine WTO members that requested talks via Seychelles’ working party, namely the US, Canada, the European Union, Japan, Mauritius, Oman, South Africa, Switzerland and Thailand (Seychelles News Agency).
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