London: Ending the US-China trade war will be nothing compared to the experience of her mother being kidnapped, according to one of the front-runners to lead the World Trade Organisation.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, 66, said the reforms she spearheaded as Nigerian finance minister led to her octogenarian mother Kamene Okonjo being abducted from her home for five days in 2012, but equipped her to replace Brazilian Roberto Azevedo as director-general of the ailing trade body.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala says she wants the WTO to play a bigger role in health.Credit:Getty Images
The second of three rounds of "confessionals" — individual meetings with the permanent representatives of each of the WTO's 164 members — ends on Tuesday, after which the pool of five candidates will be reduced to two.
Also in the running are Britain's Liam Fox, the former international trade secretary, who surprised trade officials that had not expected him to progress beyond the first round; Amina Mohamed, the Kenyan culture secretary; Yoo Myung-hee, the South Korean trade minister; and Mohammad al-Tuwaijri, a Saudi Arabian minister who advises the royal court on economics.
The last candidate standing will inherit an organisation whose appellate body — its supreme court — has been paralysed since last December, leaving the rules-based international system under threat and commerce itself choked by trade wars and the pandemic.
But in an exclusive interview with the London Telegraph, Okonjo-Iweala claimed to be uncowed.
"Would you be more scared if your mother was kidnapped and held to ransom with a demand that you resign your job publicly on television — or else you would not see her alive — or if you said to the US and China, you have to bridge your differences?" she said. "It's going to be a tough task but you can't compare it with what I've had to go through."
The candidates for the WTO’s top job. Top from left, Abdel Hamid Mamdouh (Egypt), Amina Mohamed (Kenya), Mohammad Maziad Al-Tuwaijri (Saudi Arabia) and Yoo Myung-hee (Korea). Bottom: Liam Fox (UK), Tudor Ulianovschi (Moldova), Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (Nigeria) and Jesus Seade Kuri (Mexico). Credit:Keystone/AP
Members' preferences remain secret until the selection process is completed on November 7, after the US presidential election. The system has drawn criticism for taking place behind closed doors in Geneva but Okonjo-Iweala stopped short of pledging to make it more transparent, suggesting only that it should be "faster, quicker and more efficient".
Asked what distinguished her from her main rival to win — Mohamed, another high-flying African woman who is the bookies' favourite — Okonjo-Iweala claimed she was "the only candidate working at the intersection of public health and trade", given her current role as chairman of the board at Gavi, the vaccine alliance backed by the Bill Gates Foundation.
"The WTO has to be part of the solution to the COVID-19 pandemic," she said. "The WTO has rules on how, in a public health emergency, you can invoke the possibility for countries to license products and produce them to make them more affordable and accessible. South Africa invoked it during the HIV crisis when people were dying because they couldn't get access to HIV drugs."
She pledged to "massively step up the monitoring effort" of countries imposing export restrictions on medical goods and medicines.
"What is needed now is not more of the same but a reformer who can actually change things," she said.
"If you don't do this, the WTO will go into irrelevance."
The Telegraph, London
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