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China Faces Market Opening Under WTO

By ELAINE KURTENBACH, Associated Press Writer BEIJING (AP) - For the Chinese, the vote in the U.S. Congress on China's trade status is a stepping stone. The real changes - cheaper imports of everything from movies and shoes to wheat and autos - will come gradually with Beijing's expected entry into the World Trade Organization.

Why Expand China Trade? Everyone Wins

USA Today As Congress prepares today to vote on normalizing trade with China, the air is choked with competing arguments, just as it was during the debate on free trade with Canada and Mexico in 1993. Now, as then, the easiest way for Americans to cut to the heart of the matter is to assess what's in the deal for them. The short answer is "plenty."

Mbeki Lashes WTO, Globalisation

From Business Report / Independent Newspapers, South Africa / By Peter Galli San Francisco - The failure of globalisation to effectively address the needs of developing countries was one of the main reasons behind South Africa's high unemployment rate and lack of foreign investment, President Thabo Mbeki said on Wednesday.

Poll Shows China Trade Bill Short of Passage

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two-hundred-nine lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives said they would support or were likely to support permanent normal trade relations for China, nine votes short of the number needed for passage, according to a Reuters poll updated daily. To clear the 435-member House, the Clinton administration must round up 218 supporters.

Vote Narrows on Landmark China Bill

By TOM RAUM / Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -- Both sides were stepping up a lobbying blitz on the eve of House debate over whether to liberalize trade ties with China. Supporters cautiously predicted victory, while labor unions and other opponents insisted the battle was not over.

Kenya First to Sign Biosafety Protocol

Third World Network | May 23, 2000 | Lim Li Lin and Cecilia Oh Nairobi - Kenya made history on 15 May by being the first country to sign the Cartagena Biosafety Protocol. The Kenyan President, Daniel Arap Moi, was the first head of state to put his signature to the Protocol.