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Viewing cable 08PARISFR2332, UNESCO CULTURAL DIVERSITY CONVENTION: INTERGOVERNMENTAL

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08PARISFR2332 2008-12-29 12:12 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Mission UNESCO
UNCLASSIFIED   UNESCOPARI   12292332 
VZCZCXRO5968
RR RUEHAP RUEHFL RUEHGI RUEHGR RUEHKN RUEHKR RUEHMA RUEHMJ RUEHMR
RUEHPA RUEHPB RUEHQU RUEHRN RUEHSK
DE RUEHFR #2332/01 3641212
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 291212Z DEC 08
FM UNESCO PARIS FR
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC
RUCNSCO/UNESCO COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 PARIS FR 002332 
 
SIPDIS 
 
PLEASE PASS WHA/OAS:  MKOPOLOW 
GENEVA PASS USTR 
USEU PASS USTR 
PLEASE PASS EEP/TTP FOR CHENNIGER 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: SCUL UNESCO USTR WIPO WTRO KIPR
SUBJECT: UNESCO CULTURAL DIVERSITY CONVENTION:  INTERGOVERNMENTAL 
COMMITTEE DECISIONS MOVE CONVENTION ONE MAJOR STEP CLOSER TO FULL 
IMPLEMENTATION, BUT DIFFICULT WORK STILL AHEAD 
 
REF:  PARIS FR 1342 
 
1.  Begin Summary.   During its week-long second ordinary meeting, 
the 24-member Intergovernmental Committee for the Protection and 
Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions ("the IGC" or 
"the Committee") took decisive action on each of the items on its 
agenda, although two items (preferential treatment and the Fund) 
will require further work at the next session.  One of the 
Committee's most important actions at this session was its 
consideration of six (6) experts' reports on the forms of 
"preferential treatment" that "shall" be given to developing 
countries by developed countries, according to Article 16 of the 
Diversity of Cultural Expressions Convention.  The Committee 
determined, however, that it was not yet prepared to adopt 
operational guidelines on the complex issue of preferential 
treatment.  It did adopt detailed operational guidelines to 
implement Article 13 (Integration of culture in sustainable 
development), Article 14 (Cooperation for development) of the 
Convention, and Article 18 (the Use of Resources of the 
International Fund for Cultural Diversity).  Following a protracted 
philosophical debate, the Committee decided not to adopt operational 
guidelines to implement Article 12 (Promotion of international 
cooperation), concluding that Article 12's terms were sufficiently 
clear and needed no further elaboration.  The Committee elected a 
new Chairperson (St. Lucia) and new Bureau (Croatia, India, 
Luxembourg, Oman and Senegal), and decided to schedule an 
extraordinary meeting (23-25 March 2009) before the June 2009 
Conference of Parties meeting where all preliminary draft 
operational guidelines must be approved before they can become 
operational. 
 
2.  Summary cont'd.  The meeting was, for the most part, ably 
chaired by the former Canadian Ambassador Gilbert Laurin.  In terms 
of the Committee's political dynamics, what stands out from the 
debates thus far is an apparent growing North-South divide between 
developing and developed (particularly European) countries, 
especially when it comes to expectations for and approaches to 
implementation of this Convention.  This divide could further widen 
when the Committee meets again in March 2009 where the politically 
sensitive issue of preferential treatment will be taken up and 
operational guidelines adopted on that subject.  Moreover, at this 
stage of the implementation process, India, Brazil, St. Lucia, and 
South Africa have become a four-power axis that together routinely 
wield disproportionate and often distorting influence over the 
decisions of the Committee.  They are increasingly using their 
collective power on the Committee to exploit the Convention's vague 
language to foster sometimes unintended interpretations of the 
Convention to foster their self-interests.  This unsettling pattern 
of activity in the implementation of the Convention offers yet a 
further reason, in addition to others that can be cited, why the 
U.S. would be ill-advised to ever consider becoming a party to this 
Convention as currently worded and interpreted by the preliminary 
draft operational guidelines.  End Summary. 
 
3.  The IGC met from December 8-12, 2008 at UNESCO HQ for its second 
ordinary session.  The U.S. was represented by an inter-agency 
Observer Delegation that comprised: Ambassador Louise Oliver 
(Delegation Head); Mission Legal Adviser T. Michael Peay; IO/UNESCO 
officer Laura Gritz; US Trade Representative (USTR) attach Ken 
Schagrin from the USTR Geneva Office; US Patent & Copyright Office 
attorney Michael Shapiro; and WHA/OAS officer Melissa Kopolow.  USTR 
attorney Dan Mullaney (at USEU Brussels) was also an integral member 
of the U.S. delegation who was prepared to travel to Paris, on short 
notice, to ensure continuous USTR presence on our delegation. 
Several members of the U.S. delegation will retain continuing 
oversight responsibility to monitor implementation of this 
Convention when it becomes fully operational, not long after the 
change in the U.S. Administration.  For this and other reasons, U.S. 
Mission UNESCO Permanent Representative, Ambassador Louise V. 
Oliver, considered it strategic to have an enhanced U.S.  Observer 
delegation at this important Committee session, the better to ensure 
continued, close U.S. inter-agency coordination and joint oversight 
of this instrument whose implementation has important implications 
for U.S. multilateral, trade and other related interests. 
 
4.  Article 12's Draft Operational Guidelines.  The meeting got off 
to a bumpy start when a contentious philosophical debate arose over 
the need for guidelines to implement Article 12 (Promotion of 
International Cooperation).  Complicating that debate was a 
collateral disagreement over whether, in connection with that 
Article, the Committee should also adopt a proposed set of guiding 
"principles." This idea was favored by a number of developing 
countries, but strongly opposed by most of the Committee's European 
members, who considered the principles redundant to those already 
contained in the Convention itself.  India wanted to add yet a 
further principle that in effect would have said that "the current 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  002 OF 009 
 
 
international financial crisis should not be used as grounds to 
diminish international cooperation."  The debate over whether to 
adopt draft guidelines and draft principles under Article 12 was 
protracted and at times sharply divisive pitting outspoken 
developing countries like India, Mali, and Brazil against developed 
countries like France, Germany, and Luxembourg.  During the course 
of the debate, Brazil accused France and other Northern countries of 
wanting to use the Convention to foster continued trade 
relationships that in practice tend to benefit the North 90 percent 
of the time and the South only 10 percent.  This insinuation was 
sharply rebuffed by France, and this exchange set an early tone for 
similar North-South tensions that played out in the discussions 
during the course of the week. 
 
5.  After much back and forth, the Committee ultimately decided not 
to adopt any operational guidelines on the promotion of 
international cooperation because "Article 12 is self-sufficient." 
But, at the closing session, India reminded the Committee that it 
had nearly overlooked its decision to return to the issue of what to 
do about the principles.  (That decision had been made earlier in 
the week to get around the gridlock this issue had caused so early 
in the meeting.)  India then accused the Secretariat of "bad faith" 
for failing to remind the Committee of this fact.  A vain attempt to 
re-open discussion on the principles quickly led to renewed 
North-South divisions on this issue.  So, with no remaining time for 
discussion at the closing session, the Committee decided to bracket 
the draft principles and defer discussion of them to a follow-on 
meeting where it would be finally decided whether they should be 
retained or discarded.  This exchange on the final day soured what 
was supposed to have been a happy ending to the 5-day session and 
instead offered an identical bookend for how the meeting had begun. 
 
6.  (Article 13's Draft Operational Guidelines (Culture for 
sustainable development).  Brazil put forward an extensive set of 
amendments for these draft guidelines the debate over which consumed 
a considerable part of two sessions.  Some Committee members were 
sympathetic to the socio-political goals behind a number of Brazil's 
proposed amendments, but saw them as going far beyond the scope of 
Article 13.  Brazil mentioned emphatically a recent OAS ministerial 
meeting at which OAS Member States agreed to "reinforce cultural 
industries in developing countries" and urged OAS Member States to 
carry that message into these UNESCO deliberations.  Luxembourg said 
that Brazil's suggestions were too broad for operational guidelines, 
and India said they didn't fit into the subject matter of Article 
13.  Moreover, Brazil's relentless attempts to include 
education-related concepts into these operational guidelines were 
also thwarted when Germany said that education in sustainable 
development belonged in UNESCO's Education Sector, not in this 
Convention.  It was only after Brazil finally realized it had no 
support that it decided to withdraw its proposed amendments.  The 
Committee then proceeded, without too much further ado, to adopt a 
set of detailed draft operational guidelines on the integration of 
culture into sustainable development under Article 13.  Among the 
salient points which the guidelines cover include provisions calling 
upon States Parties: to realize the full potential and contribution 
of cultural industries to sustainable development; to recognize the 
needs of women, of various social groups (including minorities and 
indigenous peoples), and of disadvantaged areas; and to facilitate 
the elaboration of statistical indicators, the exchange of 
information, and the dissemination and sharing of best practices. 
These preliminary draft operational guidelines will be recommended 
to the Conference of Parties to the Convention for consideration and 
final adoption when the Conference meets in June 2009. 
 
7.  Article 14's Draft Operational Guidelines (Cooperation for 
Development).  Several aspects of these draft guidelines became 
sources of notable tension between the countries of the South and 
the North on the Committee.  For example, Northern/developed 
countries came under heavy pressure over their denials of temporary 
entry visas for artists coming from the South.  This, it was said, 
hinders the international mobility of such artists and thus their 
ability to promote the diversity of cultural exchanges.  Many 
Committee members from the South asserted that meaningful 
implementation of this Article should entail the "right" to 
unlimited access and mobility of artists and should include special, 
flexible visa regimes to that effect.  There was an interesting, but 
inconclusive, verbal tug of war between the Ambassadors of India and 
France over how to address the issue of visas for artists from 
developing countries.  In an effort towards compromise, the draft 
guidelines were amended to include a clause that calls for measures 
to facilitate "the mobility of artists and other cultural 
professionals and practitioners from developing countries and their 
entry into the territory of developed and developing countries 
through, inter alia, consideration of flexible short-term visa 
regimes in both developed and developing countries to facilitate 
such exchanges."  The guidelines agreed to also call for 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  003 OF 009 
 
 
"institutional, regulatory, legal, and financial incentives" to 
support distribution/dissemination of cultural activities, goods, 
and services. 
 
8.  China successfully urged the inclusion of a provision in the 
guidelines that calls on developed countries to supply "fair and 
favorable conditions for technology transfer to developing 
countries."  In a similar vein, the Article 14 guidelines also 
contemplate several other highly ambitious measures including, among 
other things, "joint development of technology for the benefit of 
developing countries," and "tax benefits" for "micro, small- and 
medium- sized enterprises, cultural industries, artists, 
professionals, practitioners of the cultural sectors."  Notably, 
with these kinds of amendments now contained in the Article 14 
operational guidelines, they have indirectly become another category 
of preferential treatment measures for developing countries.  The 
crucial difference is that the guidelines for Article 16 make 
"preferential treatment" for developing countries mandatory, for 
certain specified purposes, while Article 14 encourages a broader 
scope of such treatment on a discretionary basis.  The guidelines 
for Article 14 will also be submitted to the Conference of Parties 
for consideration and final adoption in March 2009. 
 
9.  Article 18's Draft Operational Guidelines (International Fund 
for Cultural Diversity).  The debate concerning these guidelines 
produced several interesting sources of tension during the debate. 
One source of tension was between those who wanted the guidelines to 
ensure preferential access to the Fund for the neediest, i.e., the 
"least developed countries," versus applicants to the Fund who come 
from countries considered as "developing" but that have attained 
comparatively higher levels of development (e.g., India, Brazil, and 
China).  Towards that end, Mali tried, but failed, to get in 
language that would have required consideration of "the multiplicity 
and development status of beneficiaries."  The European states 
generally supported making such a distinction, in order to favor the 
neediest countries.  However, India, in a bold move, motivated no 
doubt by self-interest, succeeded in blurring such distinctions 
among developing countries in as many places as it could in the body 
of the guidelines.  (Comment: This issue of making a distinction in 
the "developing" status of different countries will probably remain 
a tender spot and possibly come back to haunt the implementation 
process downstream when competing requests for funding begin 
streaming into the Fund from both developing and least developed 
countries)End Comment. 
 
10.  A second source of tension that arose under Article 18 was 
whether "official development assistance" (ODA) from European and 
other northern countries could be donated to, and used as part of, 
the Fund, consistent with provisions applicable to the Fund.  That 
issue opened a complicated and somewhat inconclusive debate over 
whether the ODA in question would be offered without conditions, or 
whether it would be "tied or earmarked."  That in turn led to 
discussion of what is meant by "tied or earmarked."  Countries like 
Brazil and St. Lucia asserted that funds offered with conditionality 
and restrictions are not permitted under UNESCO's rules applicable 
to "special accounts," nor by Article 18(6) of the Convention (which 
provides "No political, economic or other conditions that are 
incompatible with the objectives of this Convention may be attached 
to contributions made to the Fund.")  Curiously, when France and 
other Europeans expressed their support for distinguishing between 
developing and least developing countries so as to favor the latter, 
they were accused by Brazil of seeking to use their ODA to "tie" 
European financial assistance simply to conform to EU regulations 
and norms for such prioritized assistance.  UNESCO's Legal Adviser's 
Office was asked to opine on the legality of using ODA funds in 
connection with the Cultural Diversity Fund.  He began by noting 
that the issue was "a bit delicate" but ultimately concluded that 
each ODA contribution would need to be assessed by the Committee in 
the light of Article 18(6) of the Convention and the specific facts 
relating to each particular contribution. 
 
11.  A prospective third source of tension that could later arise 
under Article 18 is "the examination of possible alternatives for 
fundraising for the Fund, including innovative financial 
mechanisms."  This very issue has already been inscribed on the 
agenda for the second extraordinary meeting of the IGC in March 
2009, at the insistence of Brazil and Jamaica.  It is likely to 
become a basis for Brazil to renew (for the third time in this 
Committee) its proposal to impose a tax on foreign blockbuster films 
(read: U.S. films) that are screened in developing countries.  Using 
such a tax as an innovative means to raise money for the Fund would, 
if adopted, almost certainly pit certain developed countries against 
some developing countries, and immediately raise trade concerns.  To 
date, however, the Committee has not shown much interest in this 
idea, but time will tell if opinions have evolved.   The preliminary 
draft guidelines for Article 18 agreed to by the Committee at this 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  004 OF 009 
 
 
session are detailed and fairly extensive.  They cover such fields 
as: objectives of the Fund; activities for which the Fund can be 
used; the intended beneficiaries; and procedures for submitting and 
approving requests.  The Secretariat noted that the Fund currently 
has deposits totaling USD 950,000.00 (plus another USD 50,000.00 
that Belgium has promised for 2009).  The secretariat also announced 
that, in conjunction with its aim to develop a fund-raising 
strategy, it will host a seminar near the end of January/beginning 
of February 2009 on ways to increase contributions to the Cultural 
Diversity Fund, targeting potential private sector donors. 
 
12.  Preferential Treatment (Article 16).  The process of actually 
drafting operational guidelines to implement the preferential 
treatment provisions of Article 16 of the Convention has not yet 
begun.  In deference to the technical complexity this issue, the IGC 
devoted one of its morning sessions to reviewing the written reports 
presented by a panel of six (6) experts.  To assist Committee and 
the secretariat to prepare draft guidelines for review at the next 
meeting, two experts (who served as "Coordinators") attended the 
Committee meeting and provided a power point review of the key 
findings in the six experts' reports.  They also freely engaged the 
Committee in a question and answer session.  The format for this 
encounter between Member States and experts (incidentally) served as 
an excellent (if far too rare) example of how UNESCO can provide 
Member States with a constructive forum for meaningful, two-way 
exchanges of views with outside experts.  Not only did the 
Coordinators offer first-rate summaries and oral presentations of 
their personal views on several key issues relating to preferential 
treatment.  They also openly and constructively debated between 
themselves points on which they disagreed.  The overall encounter 
served both to enlighten Member States and to underscore for all 
concerned the inherent complexity of the preferential treatment 
issue - even for experts in this field.  One Coordinator (Professor 
Vera Thorstensen, from Brazil) distributed a very helpful three-page 
summary document entitled "Reports on Article 16: Overview", which 
she prepared that lists the key conclusions on which nearly all 
experts agreed.  The full text of that document can be found at 
paragraph 23 below.  Among the most important of its conclusions are 
the following: 
 
-- the concept of preferential treatment within the meaning of 
Article 16 must be interpreted in the light of other relevant 
provisions of the Convention, in particular Article 14 on 
cooperation for development. 
 
-- the concept of preferential treatment is wider than a narrow 
trade understanding and must draw on "cultural cooperation 
mechanisms" that go beyond just trade. 
 
-- preferential treatment can be made conditional upon respect for 
the Convention's guiding principles, e.g., Article 2 (respect for 
human rights and fundamental freedoms, etc.) 
 
-- existing WTO and other international legal frameworks should be 
used creatively, where feasible, to achieve the goals of 
preferential treatment, for purposes of the Convention. 
 
13.  During the afternoon of Thursday, December 11, the Committee 
met (without the experts present) and discussed at length the 
experts' reports and the interchange with the experts from earlier 
that day.  A number of Committee members also offered for the record 
their respective country views on issues related to preferential 
treatment.  Once again, divergent perspectives between the North and 
the South became quickly apparent.  An important example of 
divergence relates to the issue of who should benefit from 
preferential treatment, and what criteria should be used to 
determine eligibility. 
 
14.  The issue of granting temporary visas to artists and other 
cultural professionals, and instituting new legal regimes to 
"guarantee" the issuance of such visas, came up again (as it did 
under Article 14) in the context of preferential treatment and will 
likely continue to loom as a major issue.  Nearly all Committee 
members from the South strongly favor flexible visa regimes. 
Discussion of preferential treatment under Article 16 was often 
conflated with the terms of Article 20 (the relationship of the 
Convention with other instruments), including the issue of whether 
the Article 16 guidelines should specifically take into account the 
content of Article 20.  (St. Lucia, for instance, said that the 
Article 16 guidelines should be drawn up entirely at UNESCO with no 
input from the WTO in Geneva; South Africa stated that Article 16 is 
a lever that should be used to counter other multilateral 
organizations such as the WTO; India acknowledged the synergy 
between Articles 16 and Article 20, while noting that those articles 
clearly implicate WTO and WIPO, demonstrate the complexity of this 
Convention, and indicate why this Convention should not infringe 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  005 OF 009 
 
 
upon other legal regimes; the European Commission (speaking for all 
EU Member States, invoking its competence on trade matters) opposed 
making any mention of Articles 20 or 21 in the Article 16 
guidelines);  Brazil proposed organizing a UNESCO-WTO seminar on the 
issue of preferential treatment, though most Committee members 
thought this idea premature.  Interestingly, many Committee members 
were (or seemed) insufficiently aware of the Convention's 
implications on the international trade regime.  This melange of 
views will need to be reconciled in the Committee's subsequent 
sessions. 
 
15.  In the United States delegation's only intervention on a 
substantive issue as an Observer State, USTR representative Ken 
Schagrin read a cleared statement that offered U.S. views, for the 
record, on the issue of preferential treatment.  The full text of 
that statement can be found at paragraph 22 below. 
 
16.  The Bureau for the Committee decided that it would be prudent 
to give IGC members, and their governments, additional time to 
reflect further on the issue of preferential treatment and what the 
content of draft guidelines on this issue should be.  To assist that 
process, it was decided that the secretariat would prepare a short 
"Questionnaire" on this issue to be sent out immediately to IGC 
members and to other States Parties to the Convention.  When the 
chairman then approved a request to allow select representatives 
from civil society to also reply to the questionnaire, U.S. 
Ambassador Oliver intervened to ask whether Member States of UNESCO 
that are not parties to the Convention would also be allowed to 
offer comments in response to the questionnaire, India (more 
delicately) and St. Lucia more sharply intervened to oppose any 
involvement by such non-States Parties in the questionnaire process. 
 St. Lucia added tartly "If you want to be heard on this, then join 
the Convention."  No other delegation spoke up on the question and 
the Chairman ruled against the U.S. request.  The U.S. then 
immediately intervened one time further to explain (for the record) 
that our request had been based in part on the fact that all UNESCO 
Member States, through their assessed contributions, are helping to 
fund the secretariat staff costs to implement this Convention, and 
thus should have an opportunity to be heard on these issues as well. 
 The following day, the representative from Belgium stated that his 
country was not yet a party to the Convention but was actively 
progressing through its internal political steps towards 
ratification of the Convention.  Belgium noted that it had already 
given USD 50,000.00 to the Cultural Diversity Fund for 2008 and 
would give a similar amount in 2009.  It then asked to be allowed to 
offer comments on the questionnaire.  The chairman politely declined 
Belgium's request, explaining that the preceding day the Committee 
had turned down a similar request from another State non-party to 
the Convention (the U.S.) and therefore the issue was closed. 
 
17.  In wrapping up its discussion on Preferential Treatment, the 
Committee adopted a decision that: took note of the debate that 
occurred on that subject; underlined the importance of early 
implementation of preferential treatment for developing countries; 
authorized the preferential treatment questionnaire to be sent out, 
with responses due before 31 January 2009; and requested the 
secretariat to present to the IGC at its next session "preliminary 
draft Operational Guidelines on Article 16" taking into account the 
replies received to the questionnaire.  It is worth noting that in 
the six experts' reports on preferential treatment, and in the 
Committee's discussions during the week, there were a surprising 
number of references to the protection of intellectual property 
rights (IPR) and traditional knowledge (TK), including folklore. 
(Comment: During negotiation of the Convention, the U.S. strongly 
urged that a substantive provision be included affirming the 
positive role that IPR could play in fostering cultural diversity 
and diminishing the damaging effects of piracy on local creative and 
cultural industries, especially in developing countries.  U.S. 
views, however, were largely ignored and yielded only a single, weak 
reference to IPR protection in the Convention's preamble.  It is now 
interesting to see that experts from three countries that helped to 
squelch U.S. views on IPR during the negotiations (India, South 
Africa, and Barbados) have come around to validating U.S. views 
about the value of IPR protections.  The rising focus on IPR and TK 
within the Committee's deliberations is further indication of a need 
for ongoing close monitoring of these issues in order to ensure the 
Convention is implemented in a manner not inconsistent with U.S. IPR 
interests and in a manner that complements rather than conflicts 
with ongoing work at WIPO on these issues. End Comment). 
 
18.  Proposed Agenda Items for Committee's Extraordinary Session 
(23-25 March 2009).  The debate centered largely on the need to 
ensure that Article 16 remains the primary focus at the Committee's 
extraordinary session and that adequate time is set aside to review 
and approve draft guidelines for preferential treatment under 
Article 16.  Brazil stressed the need also to devote serious time at 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  006.2 OF 009 
 
 
that session to discussing alternative forms of funding the Fund, 
"including through innovative means."  Views on "innovative means" 
diverged, again along North-South lines, with the German Ambassador 
saying that "innovative" ideas for funding the Fund fall within the 
prerogative of Finance Ministers, not this Committee. 
 
19.  Election of New Committee Officers.  Brazil moved the 
nomination of St. Lucia (Mrs. Vera Lacoeuilhe) to become the new 
chairperson (replacing former Canadian Ambassador to UNESCO Gilbert 
Laurin), and this motion was quickly adopted by acclamation.  Mr. 
Mouhamed Konat from Senegal was elected Rapporteur, and Croatia, 
India, Luxembourg and Oman were elected Vice-Chairperson of the 
Committee.  In order to secure India's re-election to the Committee 
in conformity with the Committee's rules, however, the Committee had 
to suspend "exceptionally for this election the application of 
Article 12.1 of its Provisional Rules of Procedure providing for 
non-immediate re-eligibility of the members of the Committee."  This 
was done at the recommendation of UNESCO's legal adviser without 
controversy in order to ensure that the Asian-Pacific region has 
fair geographical representation on the Bureau. 
 
20.  Other Business.  Two complaints of a procedural nature came up 
and were briefly discussed under the rubric of "Other Business." 
The first complaint was from the in-coming chairperson (St. Lucia), 
who observed that of the 94 States Parties to the Convention only 
about a dozen States thus far had made regular, or any, 
contributions to the International Fund for Cultural Diversity 
established by Article 18 of the Convention.  St. Lucia issued an 
appeal for more regular, voluntary contributions and said this needs 
to be taken up at the next (March 2009) meeting.   The second 
complaint came from two sources, Tunisia and India.  Tunisia, 
speaking on behalf of itself and Oman, used this occasion to chide 
the Secretariat once again (as Tunisia had done earlier in the week) 
for having shown religious and cultural insensitivity in scheduling 
the Committee's meetings during a week that coincided with one of 
the most important Muslim holidays (Eid al-Adha, December 8 and 9). 
India leapt in to voice a similar and more generalized complaint 
about poor scheduling of UNESCO meetings by the Secretariat; about 
the latter's need to show greater sensitivity toward all religious 
holidays in scheduling meetings; and about the failure to schedule a 
pause in this Committee meeting in order to allow members to 
participate briefly in the Director General's special program on 
December 10 that commemorated the sixtieth anniversary of the 
Universal Declaration of Human Rights. These complaints (all valid) 
added further to the dark mood in the room during the closing 
session of the meeting. 
 
21.  Begin Comment.  North-South geo-political cracks have clearly 
begun to emerge within the group of States Parties that had 
previously represented an unbreakable solidarity front on the issue 
of cultural diversity.   There are reasons to believe that this 
divisive pattern will continue and perhaps lead to either gridlock 
or a glacial pace in the implementation of this Convention.  The 
March 2009 extraordinary meeting could therefore become a kind of 
fork in the road for the Committee.  For instance, how it deals with 
the "preferential treatment" guidelines may become a key indicator 
of the direction in which this Committee is headed.  A second 
important indicator of the Convention's prospective success or 
failure could well be how the Committee disburses money from the 
Fund, and its political ramifications.  The pattern of frequent 
Committee meetings that have occurred since December 2007, including 
the extraordinary session set for March 2009, represents a growing 
drain on the Culture Sector's limited budget for hosting all UNESCO 
convention meetings. If continued, it is likely to become an 
on-going disproportionate claim upon those budgetary resources. 
 
22.  Comment cont'd. The Committee's new Bureau of member states (as 
well as the individual personalities on it) will also play a key 
role in how effective this body will be in achieving its ambitious 
goals. Most states on the new Bureau are comparatively weak, which 
will ensure that India and St. Lucia will have little difficulty 
exerting disproportionate influence on key issues.   Together, 
India, St. Lucia, Brazil and South Africa will likely continue 
collaborating closely and be determinative voices in guiding the 
Committee's work.  The Europeans on the Committee (including, at 
times, the voice of the European Commission) as well as Canada, will 
probably (and some would say, deservingly) face formidable 
challenges ahead, as they try to walk the difficult line between 
blunting the extremist impulses of developing countries on the 
Committee, while trying to show continued solidarity with those very 
countries on the cultural diversity issue.  It appears that the 
North-South coalition of expediency that engineered adoption of the 
Convention in 2005 is starting to fray, at least at this stage of 
the implementation process.  In this vein, a prominent member of the 
Brazilian delegation, in a moment of discreet candor, told a U.S. 
delegation member that one reason why he personally regrets the U.S. 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  007 OF 009 
 
 
is not inside the Convention framework is because he does not trust 
the Europeans and finds them to be Janus-faced about this 
Convention. 
 
23.  Comment cont'd.  U.S. delegation members noted, with 
disappointment, that a number of delegations openly or privately 
expressed hope that the new U.S. Administration would do an 
"about-face" on this Convention and make them all happy.  When 
appropriate opportunities were presented, U.S. delegation members 
cast serious doubt on this ill-founded assumption, adding of course 
that they could not speak for the new Administration.  For this and 
other reasons, it is important that the U.S. continue closely 
monitoring the implementation of this Convention through our 
inter-agency observation delegation.  Sustained U.S. oversight will 
help ensure that the new Administration is kept well informed about 
the determined joint efforts of the Committee and UNESCO's 
secretariat to use this Convention offensively as a way to give 
greater international prominence to the potent issue of culture. 
Sustained oversight of all Convention-related meetings will also 
ensure that all relevant sectors of the U.S. Government remain 
mindful of the continuing dangers and challenges that this flawed 
Convention and its implementation can pose to important U.S. foreign 
relations, trade, and other related interests . End Comment. 
 
24.  Text of U.S. Statement on Preferential Treatment: 
 
BEGIN TEXT 
 
Draft Statement for the Record of the United States of America on 
the Issue of Preferential Treatment (Article 16 of the UNESCO 
Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of 
Cultural Expressions) 
 
As the United States is not a party to the Convention, we have 
listened with interest to the Committee's deliberations, but have 
refrained, as an Observer State, from making formal comments. 
However, we would like to take advantage of this opportunity to 
commend the efforts made by the Experts in their reports to provide 
constructive perspectives on Article 16.  The United States 
recognizes that expanding the interpretation to include most forms 
of capacity building provides a more robust - and probably more 
effective - set of implementation options than a narrower focus on 
preferential market access in a strictly trade-related sense. 
 
From the beginning, we have always noted, as one of our several 
concerns, that the path of this Convention not collide with trade 
agreements, and that if anything this Convention and trade and 
intellectual property rights agreements should work as complementary 
instruments to advance cultural diversity.  Trade plays a critical 
role in expanding access for cultural goods and services, 
particularly for developing countries. 
 
Indeed, where governments choose to restrict access to cultural 
goods and services, the Convention's stated objective of promoting 
cultural diversity is not served. Certainly preferential treatment 
can facilitate cultural exchanges and foster greater cultural 
understanding, cooperation and development.  And, so too can an open 
trade environment that allows for the free flow of cultural goods 
and services to complement the free flow of ideas called for in 
UNESCO's Constitution.  Indeed, the principles embedded in trade 
agreements - opportunity, predictability, fairness - are essential 
to expanding cultural industries and diversity - and are something 
that can enrich us all. 
 
Therefore, preferential treatment based on merit or economic need 
can comfortably co-exist with trade agreements, and they should be 
considered as mutually enhancing complements to each other rather 
than mutually exclusive. 
 
So in conclusion, we would urge Parties drafting operational 
guidelines, as well as when preparing answers to the Committee's 
questionnaire, for this Article to bear in mind that, for the United 
States, this Convention must remain complementary to and fully 
compatible with current as well as future trade obligations that are 
shared by countries of the both the North and South. 
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, for this 
opportunity to speak, and we ask that this statement be included in 
the records of this meeting. 
 
- As submitted to the Convention's Intergovernmental Committee on 
December 11, 2008. END TEXT. 
 
25.  Text of Summary of Experts' Reports on Article 16: Overview: 
 
BEGIN TEXT 
Reports on Article 16: Overview 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  008 OF 009 
 
 
 
Section B (The Concept of Preferential Treatment) 
- All experts have endorsed the view that the concept of 
preferential treatment within the meaning of Article 16 of the 
Convention must be interpreted in the light of other relevant 
provisions of the Convention, in particular Article 14 on 
cooperation for development. 
 
- All experts have argued that the concept of preferential treatment 
under Article 16 is wider than a narrow trade understanding. Aimed 
at facilitating cultural exchanges between developed and developing 
countries, preferential treatment must not be construed in mere 
trade terms but rather build on partnership and cooperation. 
 
- All experts agreed that preferential treatment can be provided 
through a variety of means and methods. Trade instruments are 
obviously one option. However, preferential treatment, as understood 
from the Convention's perspective, must also draw on cultural 
cooperation mechanisms. The latter could involve: 
 
- funding agreements and exchange arrangements, 
 
- sharing of resources and experience on best practices, 
 
- technical capacity building and transfer of technology, 
 
- specific fiscal incentives, 
 
- visa facilitation arrangements, 
 
- education and training, 
 
- joint production and diffusion of cultural expressions, 
 
- joint investment, etc. 
 
- The experts of Tunisia, South Africa, India and Brazil have also 
discussed some common concepts developed in the field of trade with 
a view to avoiding circumvention of preferential treatment. 
Positions have varied, representing a rich source for the IGC's 
debate. 
 
- With regard to the eligibility of developing countries to benefit 
from preferential treatment in the field of culture, some authors 
have taken the position that a distinction among developing 
countries that are at different stages of development could 
undermine attainment of the Convention's objectives. Others have 
argued that existing classification criteria based on economic 
indicators or a country's self-declaration could be used, coupled 
with additional cultural policy-related considerations. 
 
- As regards reciprocity, namely the granting of reciprocal 
preferences, most experts have advocated that non-reciprocity is 
congruent with the objective of supporting the emergence of viable 
cultural industries in developing countries and correcting 
imbalances in cultural exchanges 
 
- Experts have also agreed that preferential treatment can be 
conditional upon respect for the guiding principles of the 
Convention (Article 2) 
 
- Regarding graduation, that is the phasing out of preferences as 
the beneficiary countries reach a certain level of development, 
whilst some experts have argued against graduation, noting amongst 
others the difficulty in determining objective and transparent 
criteria in this respect, others suggested considering graduation on 
a case-by-case basis. 
 
- Finally, in relation to rules of origin and their relevance for 
the provision of preferential treatment in the field of culture, 
some experts took the view that there can be no alternative to 
preventing circumvention of the mechanism of preferential treatment. 
For others, rules of origin are not suitable when preferential 
treatment is granted to cultural expressions which are not locally 
specific. 
Section C (The legal and institutional framework concerning 
preferential treatment granted by/to the country/group of countries 
under study) 
- All experts have investigated the structures put in place for the 
provision of preferential treatment by/to the country/group of 
countries under study, as well as the scope, extent and nature of 
the preferences granted. 
- On the basis of the information provided, a broad distinction 
between donors and beneficiaries of preferential treatment may be 
drawn. Tunisia and the ACP countries enjoy preferential treatment in 
the field of culture, including by the EU. India and Brazil are 
 
UNESCOPARI 12292332  009 OF 009 
 
 
principally portrayed as donors of preferential treatment towards 
developing and least developing countries. The evidence provided in 
relation to South Africa revealed that preferential treatment for 
culture is not a central feature of the agreements concluded. 
Section D (Analysis of existing agreements and preferential 
treatment mechanisms) 
- The experts' reports attested to the variety of the preferential 
treatment mechanisms used or needed in the cultural field and 
revealed how different policy spaces can be used in order to 
facilitate cultural exchanges between developed and developing 
countries. 
- The Tunisian case study was based on the EU- Tunisian association 
agreement and the bilateral French-Tunisian cultural cooperation 
agreement. The EU and the Caribbean reports discussed the Economic 
Partnership Agreement (EPA), signed between the EU and Cariforum on 
15 October 2008.  The Brazilian case study examined preferential 
treatment for the audiovisual sector mainly on the basis of various 
bilateral and regional co-production agreements with developed and 
developing countries. The Indian case study focused on the 
audiovisual sector and yoga, investigating the need for the 
provision of preferential treatment in their regard. The South 
African report confirmed that preferential treatment for culture is 
not readily inscribed in the country's bilateral, regional and 
multilateral agreements and explored the need for preferences for 
most South African cultural sectors. 
 
Section E (Conclusions and recommendations) 
 
- Many of the recommendations formulated by the experts display 
similarities, suggesting a certain level of convergence. 
 
- The effective implementation of Article 16 requires the 
exploration or both trade and non-trade instruments. 
 
- Preferential treatment is facilitated when it links partners which 
formulate and implement policies conducive to the promotion of 
cultural activity. 
 
- Coherence must be ensured between preferential treatment and other 
development cooperation instruments for preferential treatment to 
have a lasting impact on cultural exchanges between developed and 
developing countries. Development cooperation measures which target 
the emergence and development of viable local cultural markets, as 
well as the training of artists, cultural professionals and 
practitioners on key competencies are particularly pertinent. 
 
- Regional cooperation between developing countries and between 
developed and developing countries is considered to be an asset for 
preferential treatment. 
 
- Civil society can make an important contribution to the 
identification and clarification of the needs of developing 
countries in the cultural sector. 
 
- Most experts also agree that the formation of appropriate 
institutions to manage and monitor preferential treatment schemes 
should be given serious consideration.  END TEXT 
OLIVER