It is a very unusual occurence if the chair opens the floor for
comments, and there is no reaction for several minutes. A room
full of more than 150 delegations in silence is a very strange
experience, especially since they are usually not shy to take the
floor, and always have something more to say. Yet, this is exactly
what happened when the plenary was reopened after 16:00 today,
although with some delay due to continued informal discussions.
So how did this silence come about? The chair opened the session,
described his perception of the situation, and told the plenary that
he did not know how to proceed from here on -- and thus invited
proposals how to move forward.
Only after the chair explicitly said that he was asking people to
restate their positions, if that is still where they stood, and more
or less invited Chile to make a start, did the flags go up. No
surprises here: All delegations were more or less reaffirming their
statements during the explosion in the morning.
After a good lot of discussion, Nigeria tried to bring in a new
proposal along the lines of working on all items, but
determining a set of criteria by which to sort them into things that
can be done immediately, and others that might need more time or
resources than those available at the moment. This immediately
triggered a response by the US delegation to say that they would only
accept the paper of the chair. Not surprisingly, since that is largely
identical with their preferred selection, as the table in my earlier blog entry has shown.
Mexico then suggested to move things into informal mode again,
and that is what happened. The observers and several governmental
delegates waited for a reopening of the plenary. But after the clock
hit 18:00, the secretariat came back to announce that there would be
no more plenary today.
Indeed, they did not even seem to know whether there would be
plenary tomorrow, or when it would start. So the delegations may
simply spend all day talking in informals, trying to come to some sort
of conclusion to bring to the general assemblies.
Only time will show whether this deadlock can be resolved, but
right now some scepticism does seem warranted.
More Information
The work we do at WIPO is a team effort, and we often help each
other out with information, and in spreading information effectively,
when necessary. The quoted comparison table for instance was based on
information Jamie Love got from the US delegation, and a compilation
of EU statements by Gwen Hinze, which I put into a visibly accessible
form.
So as I am currently in the train back to Zürich, I won't be
able to give a first-hand account of the meeting and its results, also
you might be interested in some more perspectives. So here are my
further reading recommendations:
- Gwen Hinze of EFF is blogging and will be putting her extremely
helpful transcripts online, as usual:
www.eff.org/deeplinks
- Pedro de Paranagua Moniz is blogging at:
www.culturalivre.org.br
www.a2kbrasil.org.br
- And finally: William New's IP-Watch has apparently angered
somebody at WIPO, even though he tries to maintain a carefully
neutral, balanced journalistic approach. He has however found himself
confronted with much less helpful policies this time. This should not
silence him, however, so here is the link:
www.ip-watch.org