BimANORI
 Watching  the world, watching our Regions
  
  Number   121 August, 2006
  
      
  The  RegionsWatch BIMANORI News features selected news, with links to further  information about regional integration efforts worldwide. It is emailed  free-of-charge to subscribers twice a month. Comments and suggestions are  welcome to power2regions@yahoo.co.uk. You can  find these summaries posted simultaneously on http://regionswatch.blogspot.com
   
 ARTICLES
    - Legislative    instruments / conventions / protocols
     -  comesa must go:      mboweni
- asean      charter to be completed at its 40th anniversary: indonesian      fm
- sadc      meet to discuss blocs investment      protocol
- Forumssocial    and otherwise
     - ecowas      youth forum delegates lament inaccessibility to    funds
- Trends
     - An      alternative to a failed mercosur
- geopolitical      diary: a new iranian pole?
- the      uncertain fate of mercosur
- sadc      progresses
- caricom      vote seals top oas post for chile
- brazil,      portugal foster cooperation mercosur-eu
- eac      forces in joint military exercises
- vietnam      snubs unfair ec tariffs
- Communication    strategies
     - eac      unknown in east      africa
- tripoli      hosts meeting of cen-sad communication officials
- asem      still lacks visibility after 10 years
- Regional    institutions
     - sadc      parley in the offing
- wama      paves      way to monetary union
- nigeria      to spend 12% of 2007 budget on health
 
 Dear  RegionsWatcher,
  
 Nature  abhors a vacuum, and so when regional organisations go making ostensibly  grandiose claims that they will create a single currency, seek economic  convergence, or establish an army, it is easy to speculate that these  are not articulated outside a context.
  
 In  this first-ever edition of RegionsWatchs BIMANORI, we bring you, in  keeping with the tag of Making Regions Accountable, a whole, different  perspective of the filter through which to examine regional integration efforts.  
  
  Bimanori (Bi-monthly Analysis on  Regional Integration), seeks to focus on news on five particular  aspects of regional integration:
  
    - Legislative    instruments / conventions / protocols
- Forumssocial    and otherwise
- Trends
- Communication    strategies
- Regional    institutions
 
 All  these five, in some way or another, lend themselves to a degree of  accountability. You can read more about it on the RegionsWatch blog: http://regionswatch.blogspot.com.
  
 For  the sake of reference, you can find the excerpts for the articles below in each  edition. In addition, we will attempt to bring you a context upon which a lot of  the trends and developments are predicated. It is RegionsWatchs earnest  belief that by looking at contexts, one begins to provide a rationale as to the  trajectory of the regional integration agreements.
  
 In  this case, there are three important contexts. The first is the debacle of the  collapse of the WTO agreement in July; the second is the regional crisis of  Lebanon and  Israel, which has, thankfully, seen a  cessation of hostilities by the UNdespite what many may have perceived to be  its characteristic pussy-footing. Finally, there is, especially now that his  country is a full-fledged member of MERCOSUR, the context of the apparent  growth of leftist ideology as expressed by Venezuelas Chavez in Latin  America.
  
 Understanding  Regional Integration
 I  think its fair to say that regional integration is often rendered to a level of  abstraction that it is quite understandable why citizens, as in the East African  Community case, have no idea  what it stands for, but a bunch of regional ministers meeting every now and  then.
  
 So  when Libyas Qaddafih organises a  meeting of CEN-SAD communications officials, you begin to feel that  CEN-SAD recognises there is a communication problem about how the organisation  projects itself. In fact, the officials also met to discuss the modernisation of  the technical communication facilities, as well as tariff systems among member  states.
  
 Its  important to understand that it is one thing to have an ineffective  communications policy even when you are doing good work, and quite another to  have one for the sake of having one. When one reads how ASEM, (Asia-Europe  Meeting) still after ten years, is considered irrelevant, or how the  Organisation of American States (OAS) is being seen as an increasingly  irrelevant institution, you begin to wonder whether it is not better to  focus on transforming the regional institution instead of lamenting over  how it never became part of the consciousness of those citizens to whom it was  supposed to mean something.
  
 
and  pruning it
 Truth  be told, it is RegionsWatchs view that considering the gamut and  proliferation of regional partnerships, it might be better to streamline  processes within existing and well-established regional organisations, such as  ASEAN; MERCOSUR; ECOWAS; SADC; COMESA; Andean Community; etc and look at how to  fast-track particular processes on, say, a regional economic currency. In  addition to this gargantuan effort could be the discarding, or possible  disbanding, of other regional arrangements that are merely predicated on  economic development, or a mere consideration to subsume them into these  well-established ones.
  
 One  understands that this is a view that would not be palatable to those keen to  dispense free-trade medication, but it is definitely something that is very much  food for thought. The absence of an alternative like this would only create,  especially in the context of the failed talks of the WTO, a free-for-all by the  QUAD (comprising the same usual suspects of Canada, the EU; US and Japan) and  otherwise, for bilateral deals increasingly done on the sly, and predicated  almost exclusively on economic development.
  
 Jabbing  the Hegemon Hard
 Speaking  of which, when CARICOM showed two fingers to the US over its selection of  the Socialist Chilean Interior Minister Jose Miguel Insulza, it was  doing more than taking a gentle swipe at the US; it was also underscoring the  importance of the OAS removing itself from the growing perception of  irrelevance, and moving it towards what the article calls a political  approach, rather than one solely based on economic developmentas is  the approach former aspirants Francisco Flores, former president of El Salvador;  and Mexicos foreign minister Luis Ernesto Derbez [who was in the infamous WTO  green room in Cancun!! Work out the mathematics!], respectively, would have  adopted. 
  
 Other  than the economics, however, what is clear is that when it comes to regional  integration projects, a lot of work needs to be done to move the regional  entities forward. Be it in terms of creating a charter for it (as  is the case of ASEAN as it looks forward to celebrating forty years of its  existence); be it by way of an investment protocol for SADC; or a  redefinition of a clear and present putative nuclear power as a regional  hard-man, such as Iran, in the Middle East.
  
 It  is therefore sad to see what, in effect, is a vilification of some  countries in the Latin American region, such as Venezuelasimply because  Chavez has been uttering some leftist ideology that does not seem to gel with  the proponents of free trade. That he has been publicly aligning himself with  Cubas Castro has done little to help  his image.
  
 Then  again, he is far from the only one to mix with Castro. CARICOM recently  threw its support behind Castro, warning ill-wishers not to create problems  for the Cuban people at this time. Things are definitely happening in  the region; and its easy to speculate that the big US Of A might not be too  keen on these developments and trends. 
  
 Political  Spaces, Tectonic Shifts
 If  we take a look at the trends and developments that this newsletter alone has  thrown up, we can begin to see an interesting set of tectonic shifts that might  run counter to the convention of practising regional  integration.
  
 First  of all, with COMESA being asked to disband by none other than  SADC, is an interesting development that is worth watching. Worth  watching because South  Africa is the putative hegemon in the Southern  African region, and when it barks, its smaller neighbours usually listen, on  account of its economic clout. 
  
 If  we forget for a second the fact that a lot of band-wagoning happens when  conflicts like these surfaceand usually in favour of the big guy (South  Africa)we can already see that it was going to be inevitable that a lot of the  neighbouring countries would prefer allying themselves with the de facto  hegemon, as expressed by the decision of some to tie their currencies to the  weightier South African rand, than ally themselves to the ostensibly-ailing  COMESA.
  
 Already,  its not looking good, with COMESA having lost Mozambique and Tanzania to  SADC. With SADC heavyweights talking about a SADC central bank, a currency  (modelled on the EU), and now a SADC Parliament (though on paper since  1996) that will play catch-up to the ECOWAS Parliament and East African Assembly  already in existence, its not hard to predict the trajectory of this  most internecine of political inter-regional  conflicts.
  
 This  calls into question whether negotiations on the Economic Partnership Agreements  (EPAs) are going to foster such inter-regional conflicts over which country  ought to be considered the hegemon to the degree that, say, ECOWAS will begin to  ask questions about the relevance of UEMOA or the Economic Community of Central  African States (ECCAS). That referred to above could be a sign of things to  come. Whats more, it might go to underscore the degree to which the EU, as a  quintessential economic actor, has managed, to some extent, to foster a  divide-and-rule strategy over the Africa Unions Africa Economic Community that  is supposed to underpin the regional entities already-established on the  continent.
  
 Speaking  of conflicts, at the time of writing, there has been an effective cessation of  hostilities between Israel  and Hezbollahthanks to the UN resolution passed last week in New  York.
  
 Seeing  as nature just loves a vacuum, one country that has already made headline-news  is keen to promote itself as the new regional entity in the Middle East:  Iran. The article below  maintains that Tehran has openly begun to  challenge the geopolitical balance of power in the Middle  East. 
  
 The  article suggests that Iran is well-aware of the weakness of  the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in dealing with issues threatening the  region. Furthermore, it has facilitated a rapprochement with  Egyptconsidered the mover and shaker of League of Arab States (LAS), and is  therefore keen to exploit the vacuum by creating a regional organisation that  would comprise the country itself, Iraq, Syria; and Lebanon.  
  
 This  new development has sent the Saudis scattering like rats in the woodpile to try  to steer Turkey away from  Iran, which has  already-established good relations over Iraq. 
  
  
  
  
  
 Questions  Remain
 Chavez  has talked about MERCOSUR forming an army, and creating energy pacts within the  grouping; as well as buying out national debt so as to form strategic  alliances.
  
 There  are claims that MERCOSUR is unnecessarily politicising itself, especially with  Chavezs articulations that are considered as ranting. There are also queries  over Paraguay and  Uruguaytwo of the founding members  of the grouping. Paraguay is  supposed to be uncomfortable with Chavez, but wants to stay for what it can  getwhich could be, in exchange for a US military base, a preferential trading  agreement with the USA. As for Uruguay, it is  supposed to be re-thinking its membership of MERCOSUR. This leaves the space for  Chile.
  
 One  article, by Sam Logan for the Swiss-based ISN Security Watch, entitled An  Alternative to a Failed MercoSur{sic}, is really about how  Chile is the free trade agreement  expert . This expertise, it is suggested, could make it the quintessential  alternative to MERCOSUR, on account of its Pavlovian attitude and strategy on  FTAs. This line of argument serves to underscore the ideology underpinning the  article.
  
 In  the final analysis, it is in RegionsWatchs view not absurd as claimed  by one commentator, for MERCOSUR to have an armybecause it is not practised  even in the EU! The West African grouping of ECOWAS during the Liberian  conflict of the 1990s established ECOMOG (ECOWAS Monitoring Group) initially on  an ad-hoc basis. It was set up to respond to a sub-regional imperative of  conflict resolution for the Liberian conflict. It is now being subsumed under  the much-talked about African Economic Community (AEC) as part of the  established regional groupings (of ECOWAS, SADC, IGAD) standby force.  
  
 That  there are two good articles castigating MERCOSUR suggests very strongly that  something monstrous is afoot. Especially with Venezuela in the  MERCOSUR house, it is clear that it is making some uncomfortable watching and  monitoring for free-trade proponents  of which there are many! Watch out for  some more MERCOSUR bashing over the next couple of weeks and  months.
  
 Finally,  as regards ASEM, with ASEAN and APEC there, is there really a need for  ASEM?
  
 Happy  Watching!
  
 RegionsWatch
 Making  Regions Accountable
   
    - comesa    must go: mboweni
from:  http://www.southerntimes.com.na/headview.php?cid=137
  
 The Common  Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) has been called upon to disband  to give way to the emergence of a Southern African Development Community (SADC)  monetary union, with South African Reserve Bank governor Tito Mboweni lambasting  the continents biggest trading bloc for being an obstacle to the attainment of  a common currency in SADC
  
   
  
    - asean    charter to be completed at Its 40th anniversary: indonesian    fm
from:  http://english.people.com.cn/200608/09/eng20060809_291360.html
 The ASEAN (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations)  Charter is expected to be completed and ratified at the 40th anniversary of  ASEAN on August 8, 2007, Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Hassan Wirajuda said. 
   
    - sadc    meet to discuss blocs investment    protocol
from:  http://www.ippmedia.com/ipp/guardian/2006/08/10/72137.html
  Finance Ministers from the Southern African development  Community (SADC) next week meet in Maseru, Lesotho, to discuss the regional  groupings Finance and Investment protocol, with a view to harmonising fiscal  polices among member states. 
The Summit,  which runs for two days beginning August 17, will also see Tanzania taking  over the chairmanship of the SADC Organ on Politics, Defense and Security.  
   
    - ecowas    youth forum delegates lament inaccessibility to  funds
from:  http://www.observer.gm/enews/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5445&Itemid=33
  
  
 Youth  delegates participating in the ongoing Second Edition of the Economic Community  of West African States (Ecowas) Youth Forum have lamented difficulty in  accessing funds to support youth entrepreneurship.
   
    - An    alternative to a failed mercosur
from:  http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details.cfm?id=16504
 In  a region where loud voices of integration shout over a reality of failed trade  policies, Chiles alternative to access to the Pacific may be a viable  solution.
   
    - geopolitical    diary: a new iranian pole?
from:  http://www.readingtheworld.com/index.php?p=498
  
 The  Iranians have taken their desire to emerge as the regional hegemon to the next  level. Emboldened by the direction of the Lebanese crisis, and backed by its  Arab (mostly Shiite) allies, Tehran has openly  begun to challenge the geopolitical balance of power in the Middle East.
   
    - the    uncertain fate of mercosur
from:  http://independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1783
  
 Several  days ago, Córdoba,  Argentina, was  the stage for a meeting of presidents of MERCOSUR countries, a gathering that  stood out for its markedly leftist tinge. This was mostly because several other  regional leaders were invited, but only two attended: Evo Morales, who was  recently elected president in Bolivia, and veteran dictator Fidel Castro, who  has governed Cuba since January 1,  1959.
   
    - sadc    progresses
from:  http://www.gov.bw/cgi-bin/news.cgi?d=20060811&i=SADC_progresses
  
 Executive  Secretary Tomaz Salomao of SADC said at a press briefing in Gaborone yesterday that  some of the achievement gained during Mogaes tenure include European Unions  reaffirmed commitment to support SADC and its headquarters project
   
    - caricom    vote seals top oas post for chile
from:  http://www.mycaribbeannews.com/politics/050404b.html
  
 In a defeat for the White House, the  socialist interior minister of Chile appeared to clinch the top OAS post with  strong backing from Caribbean  nations.
  
  
   
    - brazil,    portugal foster cooperation mercosur-eu
from :  http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID=%7B7E24FA3D-5C5E-4861-A0A9-6BFF8B9F6B0E%7D)&language=EN
  
 Brasilia,  10 (Prensa Latina) Brazil  requested Portugal to support an agreement  between the Southern Common Market and European Union.
 The  issue topped the agenda of the meeting between Brazilian President Luiz Inacio  Lula da Silva and Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates, at the Planalto Palace (executive headquarters) in Brasilia on  Thursday.
   
    - eac    forces in joint military exercises
from:  http://www.ippmedia.com/ipp/guardian/2006/08/10/72153.html
  
 East African Community  (EAC) defence forces will carry out a joint disaster management exercise in  Jinja, Uganda, from September 20 to 30, this  year
   
    - vietnam    snubs unfair ec tariffs
from:  http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID={F0FB1A5B-EF49-4E0F-AAB2-5832CF1390B0})&language=EN
  
 Hanoi,  Aug 10 (Prensa Latina) Vietnam called "unacceptable transgression of  international free trade laws" the European Commission ten percent tariff raise  on leather shoe imports from Vietnam.
 The  protectionist measure is a harsh blow to Vietnam s  leather shoe industry that will cause a 14-16 percent plus accumulative rate by  September when added to the four percent tax it has paid since  April.
   
    - eac    unknown in east  africa
from:  http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/17/512858
  
 MANY people in  Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania do not  know about the East African Community (EAC).
   
    - tripoli    hosts meeting of cen-sad communication officials
from:  http://www.angolapress-angop.ao/noticia-e.asp?ID=457242
  
 Tripoli,  Libya, 07/20 - Officials in charge of communication of the Community of  Sahelian-Saharan States (CEN-SAD) convened here Tuesday to discuss the  modernisation of the technical communication facilities and tariff systems among  member states.
   
    - asem    still lacks visibility after 10 years
from:  http://www.bernama.com.my/bernama/v3/news_business.php?id=210388
  
 KUALA  LUMPUR, July 26 (Bernama) -- Ten years after  the launching of the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) in Bangkok in 1996 amid much optimism, substantive cooperation  between both regions leaves much to be desired and tangible achievements lacking  ahead of the sixth summit in Helsinki this  September.
   
    - sadc    parley in the offing
from:  http://www.mmegi.bw/2006/August/Monday7/10051235861762.html
  
 The  Southern African Development Community (SADC) will soon have a Parliament,  Shoshong MP Duke Lefhoko told a press conference on Friday
   
    - wama    paves    way to monetary union
from:  http://www.thepoint.gm/headlines1013.htm
  
 The process of  integrating the economies and currencies of West African States is in full gear,  as the West African Monetary Agency (WAMA), set up in 1992 to facilitate this  process, has embarked on a vigorous sensitization campaign by organising  seminars in all the fifteen ECOWAS member countries on a regular  basis
   
    - nigeria    to spend 12% of 2007 budget on health
from:  http://www.angolapress-angop.ao/noticia-e.asp?ID=459615
  
 Abuja,  Nigeria 07/29 -  Nigeria is to allocate 12% of its  2007 budget to the health sector, President Olusegun Obasanjo has told West  African Health Ministers meeting here.
Opening the ministerial meeting  Thursday, he reaffirmed his administration`s determination to continue to treat  health as "a national priority along with education, food and  nutrition."
  
   
  DISCLAIMER:  
  
 The  RegionsWatch BIMANORI is a fortnightly newsletter issued by  RegionsWatch News Service. Its purpose is to circulate selected information on  regional integration, efforts, trends and developments worldwide, through the  filter of regional integration initiatives and developments that facilitate  accountability. 
  
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