U.S. says Colombia trade deal to take effect in May

The announcement came during the Summit of the Americas in Colombia, where President Barack Obama has been meeting regional political and business leaders including Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos to push for greater access for U.S. exports.

U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk told reporters in the Caribbean city of Cartagena that the trade deal Obama signed in October would be implemented on May 15, months ahead of what most trade watchers had anticipated.

“We believe this is a very historic step,” Kirk said.

Colombia’s weak labour record, including murders and attacks on union activists that were not investigated, had held up the free trade pact with the United States for years.

Politically powerful U.S. union groups like the AFL-CIO had opposed the deal – which was largely negotiated under former President George W. Bush – on the grounds that Colombia lacked the capacity to enforce worker protections.

Yesterday, Obama administration officials said Colombia’s creation of a new labour ministry, prosecution of crimes against union workers and steps to fight discrimination against Afro-Colombians and women had assuaged its concerns and made it possible to implement the trade deal.

Labour Secretary Hilda Solis told reporters U.S. officials had been working closely with Colombia on labour rights issues over the last year and the United States believes there has been “remarkable progress.”

“However, we do know that there still remain challenges,” she said.

Colombia already has duty-free access to the United States for most goods under longtime U.S. trade preference programs. When implemented, the deal will eliminate most of the duties Colombia now imposes on American farming and manufactured goods.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce welcomed the news of the May 15 implementation which it said “opens the door to new business opportunities, economic growth, and job creation,” noting U.S.-Colombian trade was already worth $14 billion last year.

Republican Congressman Dave Camp, chairman of the powerful Ways and Means committee, called the agreement to put the deal in place quickly “cause for celebration.”

But AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said the decision was “deeply disappointing and troubling,” describing the endorsement of Colombia’s labour gains “premature.”