Archive

juillet 9th, 2015

WikiLeaks/TiSA : finie la préférence nationale, les Français sont invités à choisir…américain !

2 July, 2015
WikiLeaks a rendu public l'avant-projet de libéralisation des services, discuté en secret entre les Etats-Unis et 52 pays (dont la France). Plus de barrières, plus de normes : les grands gagnants seront évidemment les multinationales américaines.

juillet 8th

Lettre de la société civile sur le futur agenda de négociation de l’OMC

8 July, 2015
En tant que 341 organisations de la société civile de plus de 100 pays du Nord et Sud globaux, groupes de consommateurs, de défense de l’environnement, syndicats, paysans et autres défenseurs du développement, nous vous écrivons au sujet de la mauvaise direction prise par les discussions actuelles à l’OMC et pour vous exhorter à renverser complètement les négociations en vue de la ministérielle de décembre à Nairobi.

juillet 7th

Wikileaks Releases Updated Secret TISA Documents Just Before Negotiations - The Huffington Post, July 2, 2015

2 July, 2015
Today, Wikileaks released a second batch of the most updated draft texts on the proposed TISA, along with substantive analysis, on each of four massive services sectors: Financial Services, Telecommunications Services, Electronic Commerce, and Maritime Transport. This follows on their release yesterday of cross-cutting annexes on Domestic Regulation, the "Movement of Natural Persons," Transparency, and Government Procurement, and the Agenda for next week's negotiations, along with what Wikileaks called the journalistic holy grail: the Core Text of the proposed agreement.

juillet 2nd

Just Before Round of Negotiations on the Proposed “Trade in Services Agreement (TISA),” Wikileaks Releases Second Set of Updated Secret Documents

2 July, 2015
Today, Wikileaks released a second batch of the most updated draft texts on the proposed TISA, along with substantive analysis, on each of four cross-cutting annexes: Financial Services, Telecommunications, Electronic Commerce, and Maritime Transport. This follows on their release yesterday of texts on Domestic Regulation, the “Movement of Natural Persons,” Transparency, and Government Procurement, along with what WikiLeaks called the journalistic holy grail: the TISA’s Core Text.

Time to wave the white flag on TISA secrecy - Prof. Jane Kelsey, July 2, 2015

2 July, 2015
Today, Wikileaks has posted recent texts from April and May 2015, including the proposed core text and annexes on domestic regulation and transparency, and provided expert analysis of those texts (wikileaks.org/tisa/).

TiSA WikiLeaked: Winners & losers of multinational trade deal - RT

2 July, 2015
WikiLeaks has published secret “core text” related to the controversial trade agreement currently being negotiated behind closed doors between the US, EU and 23 other countries. Big corporations look to be the biggest winners in the deal.

WikiLeaks Exclusive: Secret core text from Trade in Services Agreement negotiations

1 July, 2015
Leaked negotiations from a key trade deal show radical plans to deregulate services in Australia, including aged care and childcare.

TISA Exposed: 'Holy Grail' of Leaks Reveals Detailed Plot for Corporate Takeover

1 July, 2015
Days ahead of another round of secret international negotiations, WikiLeaks on Wednesday released what it described as "a modern journalistic holy grail: the secret Core Text for the largest 'trade deal' in history." Fifty-two-nation Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) uses trade regulations 'as a smokescreen to limit citizen rights,' says labor leader

Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) - Press release by Wikileaks, July 1, 2015

1 July, 2015
Today, 1500 CEST Wednesday, 1 July 2015, WikiLeaks releases a modern journalistic holy grail: the secret Core Text for the largest 'trade deal' in history, the TiSA (Trade In Services Agreement), whose 52 nations together comprise two-thirds of global GDP.

Les nouvelles divulgations sur l'ACS confirment les inquiétudes de l'ISP sur les risques de déréglementation et d'un accord secret

1 July, 2015
Les nouvelles informations récemment divulguées viennent confirmer les inquiétudes croissantes de l'ISP au regard de la restriction du droit de réglementer dans l'intérêt de la population des gouvernements et soulignent le manque de transparence qui entoure les négociations de l'Accord sur le commerce des services (ACS).