6.1 The Panel received four amicus briefs from the following non-governmental organizations:
- Collegium Ramazzini, dated 7 May 1999
- Ban Asbestos Network, dated 22 July 1999
- Instituto Mexicano de Fibro-Industrias A.C., dated 26 July 1999
- American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, dated 28 July 1999
6.2 These amicus briefs were transmitted to the parties for their information. In their written rebuttals of 30 June 1999, the EC incorporated by reference the submission of the Collegium Ramazzini. In a letter dated 18 August 1999, Canada notified the Panel that, bearing in mind the general nature of the opinions expressed by the non-governmental organizations in those submissions, they would not be useful to the Panel at this advanced stage of the proceedings. Should the Panel nonetheless accept the submissions as amicus briefs, Canada believed that the parties should be given the possibility to respond to the factual and legal arguments set out in them. In a letter dated 3 November 1999, the EC informed the Panel that it was incorporating by reference the amicus brief submitted by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, as that body supported the EC's scientific and legal arguments in this dispute. The EC also proposed to the Panel that it reject the submissions from the Ban Asbestos Network and the Insituto Mexicano de Fibro-Industrias A.C., as those documents contained no information of relevance to the dispute. In a letter dated 10 November 1999, Canada again urged the Panel to reject the four amicus briefs as it was inappropriate to admit them at this stage in the proceedings. Should the Panel nevertheless consider these submissions, Canada considered that, for the sake of procedural fairness, the parties should have an opportunity to comment on their content.
6.3 In a letter dated 12 November 1999, the Panel informed the parties that, in the light of the EC's decision to incorporate into its own submissions the amicus briefs submitted by the Collegium Ramazzini and the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, the Panel would consider these two documents on the same basis as the other documents furnished by the EC in this dispute. It was also on that basis that the Panel submitted those two submissions to the scientific experts for their information. At the second substantive meeting of the Panel with the parties, the Panel gave Canada the opportunity to reply, in writing or orally, to the arguments set forth in these two amicus briefs. At that same meeting, the Panel also informed the parties that it had decided not to take into consideration the amcius briefs submitted by the Ban Asbestos Network and by the Instituto Mexicano de Fibro-Industrias A.C.
6.4 On 27 June 2000, the Panel received a written brief from the non-governmental organization ONE ("Only Nature Endures") situated in Mumbai, India. The Panel considered that this brief had been submitted at a stage in the procedure when it could no longer be taken into account. It therefore decided not to accept the request of ONE and informed the organization accordingly. The Panel transmitted a copy of the documents received from ONE to the parties for information and notified them of the decision it had taken. At the same time, it also informed the parties that the same decision would apply to any briefs received from non-governmental organizations between that point and the end of the procedure.
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