Wikileaks releases ‘largest’ trove of docs exposing secret TiSA trade deal

3 Jun, 2015 22:30 / Updated 10 years ago

WikiLeaks has published 17 secret documents related to a controversial trade agreement currently being negotiated behind closed doors between the US, EU and over 20 WTO members. NGO Global Justice Now called the leak “a dark day for democracy.”

WikiLeaks release: 17 secret documents from the ongoing #TISA negotiations https://t.co/mpLZQuBVYq#TTP#TTIPpic.twitter.com/VL2uguLuTD

— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) June 3, 2015

The documents released by the transparency group are allegedly associated with TiSA (Trade in Services Agreement) negotiations, which have been taking place in secret since early 2013. The participants of the talks include 24 WTO members, such as the US, EU and other countries including Turkey, Mexico, Australia, Pakistan and Israel.

RELEASE: TISA secret draft covering 2/3rds of global GDP - the #TPP's big brother https://t.co/mpLZQuBVYq#TTIPpic.twitter.com/4ignazMno2

— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) June 3, 2015

According to WikiLeaks, the economies of the member countries now comprise two-thirds of global GDP. Their services “now account for nearly 80 percent of the US and EU economies,” the group says, adding that “even in developing countries like Pakistan [they] account for 53 percent of the economy.”

READ MORE: WikiLeaks aims to crowdsource $100k as reward for missing TPP chapters

The European Commission web source says the participants in the agreement, which is set “to liberalize trade in services,”“account for 70 percent of world trade in services.” The “talks are based on proposals made by the participants,” the EU source adds, saying that “TiSA aims at opening up markets and improving rules” in a number of areas, including financial services, transport and e-commerce.

A number of the world's economies, including all the BRICS countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa – are excluded from the TiSA negotiations, which purport to benefit the global economy.

Commenting on the release, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said the published documents do not contain any “protection for whistleblowers or anyone else involved in publishing wrongdoing.”

It does however have a transparency chapter, but the transparency mandates that European regulators must tell transnational investors ahead of time what they are doing,” Assange said during a video conference at the European Parliament in Brussels on Thursday, adding, “that is a situation where transparency is flowing up to organizations which already have extraordinary power and not to the population of Europe.”

The release of the 17 leaked documents on Wednesday is “the largest on secret TISA documents” and sheds light on “numerous previously undisclosed areas.” It includes drafts and annexes on such issues as air traffic services, domestic regulation, telecommunications services and transparency, with documents dating from February 2013 to February 2015. The papers were to be kept secret until at least five years after the completion of the TiSA negotiations and the trade agreement's entry into force.

Saying that the leaks “reinforce the concerns of campaigners about the threat that TiSA poses to vital public services,” Nick Dearden, director of Global Justice Now, said “there is no mandate for such a far-reaching program.”

“It's a dark day for democracy when we are dependent on leaks like this for the general public to be informed of the radical restructuring of regulatory frameworks that our governments are proposing,” Dearden said in a statement on Wednesday.

READ MORE: Secret trade agreement covering 68 percent of world services published by WikiLeaks

The Wednesday leak follows the publication of similar documents relating to TiSA negotiations in 2014. In a statement then published by WikiLeaks alongside the draft of a 19-page document, the group said that “proponents of TiSA aim to further deregulate global financial services markets.”

The agreement is part of the strategic “T-treaty trinity”: the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), TiSA, and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). It complements the other two global trade agreements dealing with goods and investments, which are all currently being negotiated in secret. TiSA is believed to be the largest component of the three.

On Tuesday, WikiLeaks announced its intent to raise $100,000 to be used as a reward for the remaining chapters of the TPP trade deal. The whistleblowing platform has previously leaked TPP chapters, including sections on intellectual property rights, the environment, and investment. In appealing for funding, the group said access to the lacking chapters is “America's most-wanted secret.”