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Friday November 30, 2012 |
Canada begins formal participation in the Trans Pacific Partnership
negotiations next week in Auckland, New Zealand. The TPP remains
shrouded in secrecy (Peter Clark has published a detailed must-read guide
that provides a complete assessment of the talks to date based on leaks
and media reports), but it appears that some individuals and
organizations may have privileged access to the text or other
negotiation information. The Department of Foreign Affairs is creating a
secret insider "Consulting Group" that will be granted access to secret
and confidential information regarding the negotiations. A source this
week provided a copy of the non-disclosure agreement that DFAIT is
requiring members of the consulting group to sign, a copy of which is
posted below.
The creation of an insider group is reminiscent of the
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Negotiations, where DFAIT spent months trying
to pull together an ACTA insider group,
only to drop the plan after the publication of the initial composition
of the group (I obtained the information via an Access to Information
request).
A TPP insider group raises a host of concerns including questions about
who has privileged access, whether civil society groups will also have
access and be invited to join, and the extent of behind-the-scenes
consultations with industry groups. While DFAIT may seek to justify the
creation of an insider group based on the need for expert advice, the
lack of transparency with the TPP is now exacerbated by a two-tier
approach to TPP information with a select, secret group gaining insider
access to information. DFAIT should immediately disclose who has been
invited to join the insider group, why it is has established a two-tier approach, and how it intends to ensure that all
Canadians have access to the latest TPP developments.
The NDA is posted below: that will be granted access to secret
and confidential information regarding the negotiations. A source this
week provided a copy of the non-disclosure agreement that DFAIT is
requiring members of the consulting group to sign, a copy of which is
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