HANOI, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) -- Senior officials from 21
member economies of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) met informally
here Sunday to conclude outcomes of their three previous meetings.
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Photo taken on Nov. 11, 2006 shows a
floral sign announcing the up-coming Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) summit meeting in Hanoi, capital of Vietnam. Hanoi has been
decorated with welcoming banners and billboards to prepare for the summit
from Nov. 12-19. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery
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During the informal meeting on Sunday and the plenary
session on Monday, delegates to the Concluding Senior Officials Meeting chaired
by Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Le Cong Phung are scheduled to
reach conclusion on facilitating free trade, developing human resources,
increasing transparency, speeding up security cooperation and strengthening
culture and tourism.
Specifically, the senior officials are expected to
touch upon resuming of the Doha negotiation round, and series of model measures
being developed for APEC economies to use as a guide in the process of
negotiating Regional Trade Arrangements and Free Trade Agreements (RTAs and
FTAs). The outcome of their discussions will be submitted to the 18th APEC Joint
Ministerial Meeting slated for Nov. 15-16.
The third APEC Senior Officials Meeting in September
in Vietnam' s central region called for countries, especially those playing an
important role in the multilateral trade talks, to resume the negotiations as
soon as possible, considered the role of RTAs and FTAs in relation to APEC's
free trade and investment goals, approved a draft action program on trade
facilitation to reduce transaction costs by 5 percent in the 2006-2010 period,
and discussed the APEC reform for improving operation efficiency, operation
connection and operation dynamics.
The second APEC Senior Officials Meeting in May in
Vietnam's southern Ho Chi Minh City reached consensus on main points of a Hanoi
action plan with specific measures to realize Bogor goals, adopted by APEC
leaders at their 1994 meeting in Bogor, Indonesia, on free and open trade and
investment in the Asia-Pacific region by 2010 for industrialized economies and
2020 for developing ones.
The Hanoi action plan, to be submitted to the
approaching ministerial meeting and then the APEC Economic Leaders' Meeting on
Nov. 18-19 for approval, puts forth concrete measures to implement the Busan
Roadmap, a step leading to the Bogor goals.
APEC leaders in 2005 developed a blueprint in Busan,
South Korea, for improving trade and investment facilitation measures, regional
travel, and seeking a satisfactory conclusion to the WTO Doha Development Agenda
round of negotiations.
As a host nation, Vietnam has initiated the APEC
2006's theme "Towards a Dynamic Community for Sustainable Development and
Prosperity" with four sub-themes, including Enhance Trade and Investment with
the Busan Roadmap and the Doha Development Agenda, Strengthen Economic and
Technical Cooperation for Gap Bridging and Sustainable Development, Improve
Secure and Favorable Business Environment, and Promote Community Linkages; and
the orientation for APEC reform.
From Nov. 18-19, APEC leaders will center their
discussions on two topics: trade and investment promotion in a changing world,
and fundamentals ensuring dynamism, growth and sustainable development in APEC,
according to the Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Since its inception in 1999 in response to the
growing interdependence among Asia-Pacific economies, APEC has become a
formidable regional forum acting as the primary regional vehicle for promoting
open trade and practical economic and technical cooperation in the Asia-Pacific
region.
APEC currently has 21 members: Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, China, China's Hong Kong, Chinese Taipei, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, the Philippines, Russia, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, the United States and Vietnam. The chairmanship rotates among its members, with Vietnam holding the chair this year.
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