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Responsible Trade
CAFTA

Feature: Faces of Trade

Faces of Trade

Read six personal accounts of real people affected by CAFTA. A bean farmer in Nicaragua describes the struggle to compete with subsidized bean farmers in North America. Citizens of a small town in El Salvador fear the repurcussions of a planned Gold Mine in their area. Women battle against starvation wages at their factory in Guatemala.

Read these stories in Faces of Trade


The Bush administration recently completed negotiations on the expansion of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) through the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). In the name of fostering commerce, CAFTA would put communities at risk by setting sharp limits on governments' authority to protect public health and the environment. CAFTA covers areas ranging from agriculture, services, intellectual property rights, investment and food safety to name a few. The countries covered by CAFTA include the U.S., Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic.

CAFTA and the proposed FTAA would not only give foreign investors new powers to challenge community and environmental safeguards, but also could force governments to weaken environmental standards covering a wide-range of service industries. Like NAFTA, under CAFTA's provisions governments could be barred from setting limits on mining and logging activities in ecologically sensitive areas, and from requiring agribusinesses to use pesticides safely.

The Bush-administration views CAFTA as a stepping stone to an expansion of NAFTA across the rest of the Western Hemisphere through the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). Negotiations on the FTAA have been ongoing for several years, and have been stalled because of differences between especially the U.S. and Brazil. The Bush-administration is hoping that CAFTA could help energize the FTAA talks.

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Feature: Father Tamayo Goes to Washington

Goldman Environmental Prize-winner Father José Andrés Tamayo visited California and Washington DC to speak out against the effects CAFTA will have on his community in Olancho, Honduras, which has been besieged by illegal logging. You can read more about Padre Tamayo and his travels on our pages.

Factsheets and Reports on CAFTA

Sign-on letters and statements


photo courtesy of photos.com

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