They said that Indian negotiating team was not able to stand firm on their demands related to the special safeguard mechanism, new issues being pushed by developed nations and on public stockholding for food security purposes.
"India has got nothing out of the Nairobi and it has also conceded ground on specific areas," Biswajit Dhar, a trade expert and Professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, said.
He said the decisions on completely eliminating export subsidies by 2023 will further aggravate the crisis in sugar sector.
Sharing similar views, Convener of the National Working Group on patent laws and WTO, Dinesh Abroi, said Parliament should urgently debate the "commissions and omissions" of the government at Nairobi.
"We demand the government to immediately prepare a white paper on the WTO negotiations to stop further damage to the erosion of development policy space," Abroi said.
Afsar Jafri from Focus on the Global Earth said: "If Bali
2013 was a mistake, Nairobi was a disaster. India agreed to the trade facilitation agreement unilaterally without getting anything in return".
Jafri said this meeting would be remembered as the graveyard for development concerns and multilateralism.
Further, Abroi said: "At Nairobi, the dismal failure of the Modi government to defend legally the rights of the people and other developing countries is nothing but an abject surrender".
"The Doha Development round is dead in the water. The US and EU refused to allow negotiations on the issue of their own subsidies for agriculture. The declaration adopted at Nairobi is effectively the death knell of the Doha Round," he said.
Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has expressed its "thorough" disappointment over non-reaffirmation to conclude 14-year-old Doha Round pacts. The five-day WTO meeting managed to win a commitment to allow developing nations to use special safeguards to protect farmers against import surges.
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