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TWN Info Service on Free
Trade Agreements
20 April 2006
Below is an article of how trade pacts with the US will undermine the
Doha Declaration, as countires can no longer break drug patents to produce
cheap generic drugs...
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U.S. pushes to limit generic-drug rights in trade pacts
By Anand Giridharadas International Herald Tribune
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 2006
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/18/business/generic.php
NEW DELHI: Under global trading rules, the inventors of medicines ordinarily
have the right to a 20-year monopoly on their inventions. But five years
ago, the United States joined 141 other countries in signing the Doha
Declaration, confirming the right of poor countries to break drug patents
and produce cheap generic drugs in the event of contagions like HIV.
At the time, Thailand was heartened. It had been trying everything in
its fight against AIDS. It coined a jingle to promote safe sex. It placed
condoms in massage parlors. Most important, it curbed deaths among the
poor by giving them generic versions of medicines invented by multinational
drug makers.
So it came as a jolt in January when the United States asked Thailand
to sign a free trade agreement that would, on paper, dilute its right
to break patents and use generics.
Washington said the agreement would save lives by spurring innovation
and by making multinationals more confident to sell drugs in the country.
But Thai officials saw the proposal as a morbid bargain: either refuse
the U.S. offer and scuttle a trade deal with the United States worth
billions of dollars, or accept it and lift the price of AIDS drugs beyond
the reach of the poor.
"Those who require the essential drugs but cannot afford it, they
will have to die," said Dr. Suwit Wibulpolprasert, the Thai official
who is coordinating the Public Health Ministry's response to the U.S.
proposal.
Thailand is not alone. It is merely the latest target of a quiet worldwide
campaign by the administration of President George W. Bush to coax developing
nations to barter away their patent- breaking rights in exchange for
lucrative trade benefits, according to public health experts and government
officials from Thailand to Brazil.
Specifically, Washington is pushing bilateral and regional trade agreements
in which countries enact "superpatents" that prolong U.S.
drug makers' monopolies and limit the conditions under which their patents
can be broken.
These new rules, once they are adopted by developing countries, roll
back the patent-breaking rights that were confirmed by the 2001 declaration
at World Trade Organization talks in Doha, Qatar.
In effect, Washington is stitching together a parallel global patents
system.
The trade deals, negotiated in secret, attract little notice. But they
have already been signed with developing countries battling AIDS, including
six in Central America. And negotiations are beginning with several
nations pivotal to the fight against the virus, from Thailand to five
southern African countries, including South Africa and Botswana.
Because of these agreements, India's generics industry, the world's
largest, is reining in plans to supply poor countries and refocusing
on richer ones, said Dilip Shah, head of the Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance,
which represents generic makers.
"For the Indian pharma industry," he said, "it's not
doomed; it will find a way out. But for the patients in the Third World,
it's bad."
Public health officials warn of catastrophic consequences if the bilateral
deals are applied to AIDS drugs.
"If you prevent countries from using generic drugs," said
Pedro Chequer, the head of Brazil's national AIDS program, "you
are creating a concrete obstacle to providing access to drugs. You are
promoting genocide, because you're killing people."
First-generation AIDS drugs reached the world's poorest people only
when the use of generics cut their cost to $140 a year from more than
$10,000. As new drugs emerge to treat patients resistant to first-line
medicines, the trade agreements make a similar drop "extremely
difficult to ensure," according to Médecins Sans Frontières, or
Doctors Without Borders.
Washington maintains that the trade deals are directed toward diseases
other than AIDS.
And Richard Feachem, executive director of the Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, based in Geneva, acknowledged that it
was too early to tell whether the bilateral agreements would be used
to block access to AIDS drugs.
"If we do see this in practice," he said, "we should
condemn it. But it really is in the interpretation of these agreements
in very particular circumstances."
Yet, in defending the bilateral agreements, Bush administration officials
often cite the AIDS example to make their case. Stronger patents save
lives, the argument goes, by keeping companies confident enough in profit
to keep discovering new drugs.
Dr. Mark Dybul, the second-ranking official in the White House program
to fight AIDS, said that because AIDS patients constantly grow resistant
to medicines, it is disastrous to widen access today and have no drugs
tomorrow.
"As an individual physician sitting in front of an individual patient,
you will do whatever you need to for that patient now," said Dybul,
a physician. "When you're a public health physician, you're not
a physician for one person but for millions of people. And you need
to be thinking about whether the action in that single setting, repeated
hundreds of thousands of times, will cause a problem for the millions."
Spreading the new patents system are U.S. trade negotiators, who some
experts believe are assuming the influence that public health experts
once had over the Bush administration's AIDS policy.
Victoria Espinel, an assistant U.S. trade representative, strongly defended
the use of trade agreements to promote patents that "have more
in place" than the patents agreed upon at the WTO talks in Doha,
a step she described as merely "harmonizing minimum standards."
"It is crucial to public health," she said, "to promote
the innovation of drugs and to make sure that research and development
of drugs continues."
As for exempting AIDS drugs from the new accords on patent-breaking,
she said, "I want to emphasize that there is enough flexibility
in our free trade agreements to allow our partners to do what they need
to do."
An explicit promise to exempt AIDS drugs, however, is not in the agreements,
said Wibulpolprasert, the Thai official. And that, experts say, is at
the heart of the problem: Nations must take Washington's word for it.
An examination by the International Herald Tribune of several free trade
agreements reveals provisions that appear, on paper, to limit the freedom
to use generics.
Several agreements, for example, prolong a patent monopoly beyond 20
years if the developing country's regulators show "unreasonable
delays" in approving a patent. This provision, absent from WTO
rules, sustains higher prices.
Many agreements also serve to prolong patents by requiring generics
to be retested as if they were new inventions. Retesting a drug biologically
equivalent to one already approved takes time and may be unethical,
since infected patients must be given placebos.
The WTO rejected this requirement, a five-year ban on the use by generics
makers of the safety data submitted for the original branded drug.
And while the WTO lets countries decide when to break patents, the new
U.S. agreements limit this action to special cases - to enforce antitrust
law, for example, or during emergencies.
Experts say the most important use of generics is excluded: to reduce
costs by making branded products compete with generics.
The generics question has also opened a rift in the United States, between
Bush and former President Bill Clinton. On a recent visit to New Delhi,
Clinton said he had confronted Bush about generics while flying to Rome
for the papal funeral last April.
"The American position is untenable," Clinton recalled saying.
In an interview, Clinton said Washington was succumbing to the influence
of the drug lobby in undermining the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects
of Intellectual Property Rights, or Trips, the WTO framework on which
the Doha declaration built.
"If a company develops a new advance in AIDS, TB, malaria, you
need large numbers right away and all the people who need it are in
poor places," Clinton said, referring to generics producers.
"If you don't have Cipla, Ranbaxy, Hetero, Aspen in South Africa
and other people to step into the breach, how are we going to do that?
I don't understand the apparent obsession with some of the big pharma
interests in trying to block them off."
Brian Knowlton in Washington contributed reporting to this article.
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