INDIA is asking for concessions in exchange for its consent to the Philippines’ request for an extension of its rice import quota.
The nongovernment Rice Watch and Action Network (R1) said it has received information from a Philippine trade negotiator in Geneva, Switzerland, that India is seeking a trade-off before agreeing to the Philippines’ request to extend its quantitative restriction (QR) on imported rice.
The trade negotiator, however, failed to disclose exactly what India is seeking in return, the nongovernment organization said.
India has been exporting cara beef to the Philippines.
R1 said the India’s recent move at the World Trade Organization caught the Philippines by surprise, having come after the September 30 notification deadline.
The NGO quoted Philippine negotiators as saying they are in the final stages of negotiations with the remaining three countries that had sought compensation for the rice-quota extension.
“Apparently, India is doing the same strategy it applied to South Korea by sending request in the last minute of talks,” Jessica Cantos-Reyes of R1 said.
The Philippines is looking into the legal ramifications of the US request. Manila earlier granted Thailand’s request for a higher rice-quota allocation, and Canada’s request for greater access of its deboned turkey meat and canola.
Philippine negotiators earlier agreed to import rice from the US under its Public Law 480 food-aid program, in which the first 60,000 metric ton shipment is expected to arrive in February or March next year.
The US food assistance is payable in 20 years at 1-percent interest.
Nine countries including Thailand, Pakistan, Egypt, China, India, Argentina, the US, Canada and Australia, responded to the Philippine request for a ban on rice imports in exchange for several concessions.
Philippine negotiators are optimistic they would secure an agreement with those countries for the QR extension until 2012.
--Angelo S. Samonte

