Secret plans to criminalize generic medicines could hurt poor countries and people
International agency Oxfam fears that companies producing affordable generic medicines for poor people could be subject to criminal prosecutions and have their medicines seized on orders from big drug companies under plans being drawn up by a closed group of mainly rich countries.
Negotiators working towards a new Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) are meeting in Morocco over the next two days to draw up multilateral enforcement rules for intellectual property, including new rules for patents and trademarks that are likely to make it harder for generic companies to provide medicines for sick people in poor countries.
Countries involved, including the European Union, United States, Canada, Japan, Australia and New Zealand, are refusing to publish the draft agreement for scrutiny.
“Based on past form – including recent seizures of generic medicines by the EU – the secrecy surrounding this deal raises real fears that poor people’s interests will be ignored,” said Oxfam policy adviser Rohit Malpani.
The European Union is pushing for a deal that would require all countries negotiating ACTA to increase seizures and prosecute companies who produce generic medicines legally in countries such as India for sale in other countries, including those not even engaged in ACTA negotiations.
These rules could encourage big pharmaceutical companies to file frivolous patents to extend their monopolies and high prices on medicines, while at the same time discouraging the practice of parallel importation. Parallel importation is an important way for a country to reduce medicine prices by enabling it to import a patented product marketed in another country at a lower price.
“The lack of transparency is completely unacceptable and increases suspicions that the Agreement under negotiation is on behalf of narrow corporate interests,” said Malpani. “Under these circumstances, we can only assume that the final text could do great harm in developing countries and undermine the balance between the protection of intellectual property and the need to provide affordable medicines for poor people.”
We are further suspicious of the exclusion from negotiations of Brazil, a country that would be likely to support the wider availability of generics and discourage any extension of intellectual property rights that would exceed minimum obligations under global trade rules. Of the 12 states plus the European Union taking part, only two, Mexico and Morocco, are developing countries.
Since November 2008, customs officials in the European Union have seized at least 18 shipments of legal generic medicines from India and China to developing countries, including medicines to treat HIV and AIDS and heart disease. In spite of criticism from public health agencies, including UNITAID, the WHO and many civil society groups, the EU is refusing to re-examine the regulation under which these seizures have been made and could now pushing for it to be extended globally through free trade agreements and ACTA.
Malpani said: “It is unacceptable for countries to negotiate any new international standard on intellectual property without addressing the public health needs of countries that could be adversely affected. The European Union should halt its unlawful seizures of generic medicines rather than trying to persuade other countries to put their legal systems at the service of drug companies.”
-
RT @OxfamAustralia: This weekend, 274 teams tackled 100km in @OAusTrailwalker Brisbane to support Oxfam's work. Read our event wrap-up: htt…2 hours 7 min ago
-
Today is World Refugee Day, a day to honor the 42.5 million people forcibly displaced worldwide http://t.co/EOshw8HBfR @Refugees #refugees2 hours 42 min ago
-
RT @oxfamcanada: If you watch 1 video today, make it this one. Life and music. #Syrian #refugees in Zaatari camp: http://t.co/nHle2Z0rjE4 hours 17 min ago
-
RT @devex: What delays development in #SouthSudan? Exclusive #interview with former child soldier and @Oxfam advisor http://t.co/YmN2n9TVuj…4 hours 29 min ago
-
#Women in the south of Thailand prove that knowledge is power http://t.co/TEXzEBldYq via @OxfamInAsia7 hours 41 min ago
-
Thanks for the RTs @WeAreEQUALS @AfriCoPoL @inovate2100 @oxfamgbpress @PactWorld @UMPorg et al8 hours 17 min ago
-
What is the #ETS and how might it help fight #climate change? http://t.co/XT3vWIANmz infographic via @SamWWF @WWFEU9 hours 53 min ago
-
#ETS structural reform needs to be much more ambitious to help stave off dangerous #climate change http://t.co/ZhcfQtzMHv @OxfamEU10 hours 2 min ago
-
#Women are due to get a bigger say in #Kenya’s #climate change policies http://t.co/aUXN1OpfSF #genderjustice10 hours 15 min ago
-
RT @youngvictheatre: And... Check out this wonderful photo gallery of Joe Wright & Chiwetel's trip to #Congo with @Oxfam http://t.co/yfusA6…10 hours 19 min ago
-
#UN, #EU sound alarm on #Syria refugee crisis in Lebanon http://t.co/zKq0PG77C1 via @AlArabiya_Eng11 hours 32 min ago
-
Empowering girls through technology: what's the role for business? http://t.co/ChGyFHWCCK cc @girlswhocode @GSMA #ict #m4d11 hours 55 min ago
-
En 2012 fueron asesinadas 606 mujeres en #Honduras. 98% de los casos permanece en la impunidad http://t.co/DN4Ixb1QsM @femicidiosHND #EVAW12 hours 16 min ago
-
1 woman is killed in Honduras every 15 hrs, but <2% of the cases are investigated http://t.co/7c88EhmIkG Act now #EVAW! #gbv12 hours 29 min ago
-
What the G8 forgot. @Jodie_Thorpe on what the #G8 should have done for farmers http://t.co/GiU0P5eaLs #tax #trade #transparency13 hours 56 min ago
