“Our trade policy is value-based. These are not just words. We have to act when there are severe violations,” Cecilia Malmstrom, the EU's trade chief, told reporters after a meeting of EU trade ministers in Austria.
This Friday (5/10) the European Union told Cambodia that it will lose its special access to the world’s largest trading bloc, and said it was considering similar trade sanctions for Myanmar in a toughening of EU policy on human rights in Southeast Asia.
Reuters reported that the EU warned Cambodia in July that it could lose its special trade status after elections returned a strongman to power after 30 years in office, and it has censured Myanmar over its treatment of the Muslim Rohingya.
“There is a clear possibility that a withdrawal (of EU trade preferences) could be the outcome,” Malmstrom later wrote in a blog post on the European Commission’s website.
Withdrawing trade preferences from Cambodia
The European Union threatened to withdraw the trade preferences because of a crackdown on the opposition ahead of an election in July, which the European Union condemned as not being credible.
Malmstrom said she had told Cambodia that the bloc had launched a six-month review of its duty-free access to the EU, meaning Cambodian sugar, garments and other exports could face tariffs within 12 months under EU rules.
“I have notified Cambodia today that we will launch the procedure for withdrawal of EBA,” said Malmstrom, referring to the bloc’s “Everything but Arms” (EBA) status, which allows the world’s poorest countries to sell any goods tariff-free into the EU, except weapons.
“Without clear and demonstrable improvements this will lead to suspension of trade preferences,” she said.
Cambodia’s exports to the European Union were worth 5 billion euros (4.4 billion pounds) last year, according to EU data, up from negligible levels less than a decade ago, with the EU using its trade policy to develop the country’s economy.
Cambodia’s July elections marked a turning point in relations with the West. Prime Minister Hun Sen was returned to power after three decades in charge and opposition supporters were stripped of their right to vote.
A Cambodian government spokesman said he was not able to comment immediately.
EU countries accounted for around 40 percent of Cambodia’s foreign sales in 2016. The bulk of those exports were from clothing factories that employ around 700,000 workers.
The main garment factory group said it remained optimistic.
“This is in the hands of the Cambodian government and the EU, and I believe that both would come to an amicable solution with mutual understanding,” said Kaing Monika, deputy secretary general of the Garment Manufacturers Association. “Continuous engagement, not sanctions, would be a way forward.”
Myanmar responds
Government spokesman Zaw Htay on Friday said removing the trade preferences would lead to job losses in the country’s garment sector.
He also said Myanmar had established a commission to probe allegations of human rights abuses and that the bloc should give the country time to report its findings.
“If a country is willing to do an investigation and if the process is not finished yet, the international community shouldn’t intervene,” Zaw Htay said.
Speaking to Reuters in Athens on Friday, the head of rights group Amnesty International said the EU should focus its pressure on Myanmar’s military leadership.
“We would rather see a targeted use of sanctions,” said Amnesty Secretary-General Kumi Naidoo.
He said Myanmar’s leader Suu Kyi, a Nobel peace laureate for her pro-democracy campaigning, had become “unrecognizable” after her actions in the Rohingya crisis.
“What Aung San Suu Kyi has done in a role as the leader of parliament has been a betrayal of press freedom, minorities in Myanmar, and democracy,” Naidoo said.
“She is unrecognizable to The Elders that she was part of, all the progressive things that she did in the past.”
Suu Kyi was an honorary member of The Elders, a group of former world leaders and Nobel laureates founded by South Africa’s Nelson Mandela.