January 30, 2003
Let us not be mistaken that the resounding announcement by G.W. Bush, of a
10 billion dollars commitment to the fight against AIDS, serves essentially
one objective: to renege on commitments made in November 2001, at the WTO
conference in Doha, to allow access to generic drugs.
The financial contribution which G.W.Bush paints in glowing colors, amounts
to 10 billion dollars over 5 years, of which 9 billion will be granted under
bilateral negotiations to a limited number of countries.
After the United States blocked WTO negotiations over access to generic
drugs last December, and a few days before negotiations resume discussions,
this announcement is a clear attempt to put pressure on developing countries
which do not have the capacity to produce drugs, in order to force them to
purchase high-priced brand-name products and limit the production and
distribution of generic products at all costs.
The recent announcements by multinational pharmaceutical companies during
the Davos summit are part of the same strategy. Far from supporting a global
response to the AIDS epidemic, these companies' goals are to divert
attention and to sweep the need for access to generic drugs under the rug.
This is how one must read Pharmacia's "philanthropic" offer to grant a
non-exclusive license for delavirdine to several "worthy" countries.
Pharmacia, on the verge of merging with the American giant Pfizer, is
organizing a great advertising campaign for a product that it has never
successfully marketed in Northern markets, while ignoring the question of
generic drugs.
Simultaneously, pharmaceutical companies continue to frantically lobby
governments and international institutions to block access to generic drugs.
Attempts by G.W. Bush and multinational pharmaceutical companies to
manipulate public opinion, just a few days before WTO negotiations resume,
should not, however, obscure the real stakes at hand. By 2005, international
regulations on intellectual property will be applied to all developing
countries. This is why the WTO must put measures into place that allow
access to generic drugs, as quickly as possible.
Olivier Jablonski
North / South Commission
Act Up-Paris
ojablonski@free.fr
http://www.actupp.org
+ 33 1 49 29 44 81
Fax : + 33 1 48 06 16 74
Act Up-Paris
BP 287
75525 Paris Cedex 11
France
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