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Canada to send special envoy to meet with Belgium over CETA rejection

Click to play video: 'Wallonia region Belgium votes to scuttle Canada-EU trade deal'
Wallonia region Belgium votes to scuttle Canada-EU trade deal
WATCH ABOVE: Canada has sent a former trade minister to Belgium in the hopes of saving a $29-billion trade deal. The fate of CETA is now in doubt after a parliament in the southern Belgian region of Wallonia voted to block a trade agreement between Canada and the European Union. Mike Le Couteur has more on whether or not the deal can be saved – Oct 14, 2016

OTTAWA – Canada has dispatched its special envoy on its trade deal with the European Union to meet with the leaders of the Belgian region that voted to reject the deal.

READ MORE: Belgian region rejects Canada-EU trade deal

Pierre Pettigrew, a former Liberal trade and foreign minister recently appointed by the current Liberal government, is off to Paris to meet with representatives of Belgium’s Wallonia region after its legislature voted earlier today to reject the agreement, known as CETA.

A spokesman for Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canada continues to push with its European partners to get the deal signed.

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READ MORE: CETA: Protests against Canada-EU trade deal held across Germany 

Click to play video: 'Germans rally against CETA, TTIP'
Germans rally against CETA, TTIP

EU trade ministers meet next week to consider the pact.

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The following week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is to meet with his EU counterparts at a summit in Brussels where the two sides are expect to sign the deal.

The Wallonia vote has created headaches for Belgium’s national government because its constitution gives its three regional governments – Wallonia being one of them – a potential veto over the deal, which has been seven years in the making.

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