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Tsunami-hit Thais told: Buy six planes or face EU tariffs

Scotsman.com

FRASER NELSON

POLITICAL EDITOR

TSUNAMI-struck Thailand has been told by the European Commission that it must buy six A380 Airbus aircraft if it wants to escape the tariffs against its fishing industry.

While millions of Europeans are sending aid to Thailand to help its recovery, trade authorities in Brussels are demanding that Thai Airlines, its national carrier, pays £1.3 billion to buy its double-decker aircraft.

The demand will come as a deep embarrassment to Peter Mandelson, the trade commissioner, whose officials started the negotiation before the disaster struck Thailand - killing tens of thousands of people and damaging its economy.

While aid workers from across Europe are helping to rebuild Thai livelihoods, trade officials in Brussels are concluding a jets-for-prawns deal, which they had hoped to announce next month.

As the world’s largest producer of prawns, Thailand has become so efficient that its wares are half the price of those caught by Norway, the main producer of prawns for the EU.

To ensure the Thais cannot compete, EU officials five years ago removed its shrimp industry from the EU’s generalised system of preferential tariffs - designed to share Western wealth with developing countries by trade.

The EU has instead slapped a tariff of 12 per cent on its fish - three times that imposed on prawns from Malaysia, its neighbour. This is still less than the US tariff on Thai prawns: 97 per cent.

The prawn tax is one in a series of protectionist measures expected to cost east Asia some £130 million each year - money being taken from its economies while EU citizens donate millions in charity.

Five days after the tsunami struck, the EU legislated against Thailand by slapping a new tariff designed to extinguish its booming trade in cumarin, a plant extract used in perfume.

On 31 December, the EU imposed duties of €3,480 (£2,430) a tonne for Thai exports of cumarin - a move entirely designed to protect Rhodia, a French chemicals firm and the EU’s only producer of cumarin.

Oxfam has attacked the tariffs, saying: "When countries are lying prostrate before us, it is criminal to continue to tax them on what they sell."

Sri Lanka has already pleaded to be exempt from EU and US textiles tariffs as it tries to recover

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Tsunami-hit Thais told: Buy six planes or face EU tariffs

So we are to believe that none of this was in the works prior to the disaster occurring? That would be hard to believe.

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Well, the OP states that the negotiations were begun before the tsunami struck but this in turn makes their headline mis-leading. I seem to remember reading at the end of November that a proposed THAI Airways deal to buy the new Airbus had been shelved by order of Thaksin until the EU dropped its ban (health fears) on importing Thai chicken...

BTW I've never understood people who type 'Yawn' in reply to a topic. Can't you just literally yawn instead? :o

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When I lt. "Yawn" I'm making a statement. The article in the Scotchman is to biased that you'd have to be blind not to see it. I don't see why Europe should give Thailand preferential treatment, it's not like those Europeans who choose to live here and indirectly support an extended Thai family in the process get any preferential treatments. Time to learn.

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