Yemen joins World Trade Organisation
Yemen joined the World Trade Organization on Tuesday, vowing to use its membership and strategic location to overcome years of strife and transform itself into a hub for maritime commerce.
Saadaldeen Ali Salim Talib, trade minister of the Arabian Peninsula nation, formally handed over Yemen’s entry treaty in a ceremony with WTO chief Roberto Azevedo.
"We have easy access to three continents, Africa, Asia and Europe. Our location is on the highway of trade. Our port in Aden is three hours away from the highway," Talib told reporters.
"We want to be on the value chain with the rest of the economies of the world," he added, saying it would revive an age-old trading history that saw Yemeni seafarer communities take root in places as far apart as Wales and Indonesia.
Yemen’s WTO admission will take the Geneva-based organisation's membership to 160 when it comes into force officially on 26 June.
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Existing members had given a green light at a WTO summit in Bali last December, but Yemen then had to ratify its entry deal.
WTO accession negotiations can be tortuous – Yemen began in 2000 - as would-be members first strike deals with countries already in the trade body. Those accords are then folded together into a single accession treaty setting out the give and take involved in joining the club.
"It's been a hard process," said Talib, underlining that Yemen was also trying to break with years of instability, enacting political and economic reforms hand in hand.
"We hope that the new Yemen will have a bigger role in the international scene, especially in trade and industry and getting connected with the rest of the world," he told reporters.
WTO membership is seen as a key step in the global economy because it gives countries easier access to other countries' markets under a set of agreed rules, as well as a forum to deal with trade disputes.
It is also considered a badge of confidence.
"The reform process has not always been easy. But in becoming a member of the WTO, Yemen has sent a very clear signal to traders and investors that the country is open for business," Azevedo told reporters.
"It brings our organisation closer to universal membership. It is a sign of the relevance and vibrancy of the global trading system," he said.
The WTO is a forum for governments to negotiate trade agreements and settle trade disputes, through a system of trade rules. The bulk of the WTO’s current work comes from the 1986–94 negotiations called the Uruguay Round and earlier negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The organisation is run by its member governments, where all major decisions are made by the membership as a whole.
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