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| World Trade Organization (WTO) Director General Roberto Azevedo plans to step down early (AFP Photo/Fabrice COFFRINI) |
Geneva
(AFP) - The World Trade Organization chief announced Thursday he will step down
on August 31, a year before his term ends, despite the COVID-19 pandemic
ravaging the global economy.
Roberto
Azevedo said it had been a "personal decision" reached with his
family, and stressed that he was not leaving to pursue "political
opportunities".
"This
is a decision that I do not take lightly," Azevedo told member state
representatives, according to a written version of his speech.
Azevedo's
early departure will come at a time when the coronavirus pandemic has pushed
the global economy and international trade into turmoil, facing downturns not
seen since the Great Depression.
Global
trade, already hit by political tensions and uncertainties around Brexit, is
expected to register "double-digit declines" in volumes in nearly all
regions this year, the WTO said last month.
The
164-member organisation was already in crisis before the pandemic hit, dealing
with raging trade wars and scathing criticism by United States under President
Donald Trump, who has pushed for reforms of the Geneva-based body.
Referring
to Azevedo's announcement, Trump told a White House briefing Thursday that
"I'm ok with it," adding "The World Trade Organization is
horrible".
'New
post-COVID realities'
Azevedo
meanwhile said he was "convinced that this decision serves the best
interests of this organisation."
The
62-year-old Brazilian career diplomat, who became the WTO chief in 2013,
suggested that an early change of leadership would help it face "new
post-COVID realities".
He also
insisted his move would avoid weighing down the WTO's 12th ministerial
conference next year with the difficult process of finding his successor.
"My
departure in August will give you the time you need to work with my successor
-- whoever she or he may be -- to shape the strategic direction for MC12 and
the months and years that follow," he said.
He said
that the current slowdown in activity due to measures taken to curb the COVID-19
pandemic offered an opportune time to seek his replacement.
EU trade
chief Phil Hogan said in a statement that he agreed.
"It is
essential that we quickly chart a new path ahead at this critical and uncertain
time for trade. It makes sense to proceed now with the succession process
rather than wait until next year," he said.
Not
everyone agreed the timing was right, however.
Azevedo's
expected departure "comes at a very bad moment for the institution, as the
trade system has become deeply destabilised," Sebastien Jean, head of
CEPII think tank, told AFP.
He pointed
to "existing tensions, in particular the scathing criticism from the US
president, violations of many agreements, the US-China trade war and the
paralysis of the appeals body."
Azevedo,
who before his appointment as WTO chief spent five years as Brazil's ambassador
to the organisation, has enjoyed a reputation as a consensus-builder.
During his
first term he dedicated much energy to trying to unblock long-deadlocked trade
agreements.
African
candidate
The WTO has
for nearly two decades failed to conclude the Doha Round of trade
liberalisation talks.
However, on
Azevedo's watch, WTO members did conclude their first ever multilateral
agreement when they reached a deal in Bali in late 2013 on overhauling global
customs procedures.
But since
his second term began in 2017, countries have failed to reach further
multilateral agreements, and the WTO has struggled to deal with a US
administration openly hostile to its multilateral approach.
The WTO was
forced to put its dispute settlement appeal system on ice last December after
Washington blocked the appointment of new judges, preventing it from reaching a
three-judge quorum.
US Trade
Representative Robert Lighthizer meanwhile hailed Azevedo's service.
"Despite
the many shortcomings of the WTO, Roberto has led the institution with grace
and a steady hand. He will be difficult to replace," he said in a
statement.
Many
observers are already betting on a candidate from Africa -- and against a WTO
insider.
One
diplomatic source told AFP that there appeared to be a clear
"consensus" that the next leader should not come from "a big
economic power", and certainly not from China or the United States, in
light of their trade war.

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