Green Light to Put Public Health First At WTO Ministerial Conference in Doha
14 November, 2001
Doha, Qatar - The one hundred and forty two countries
meeting at the 4th WTO ministerial conference in Doha clearly affirmed
that governments are free to take all necessary measures to protect
public health. Now, if drug companies price drugs beyond the reach of
people who need them, governments can override patents without the
threat of retribution.
"The huge profile given to the issue changes the political climate,
building on the victories in the South Africa and Brazil cases," said
Michael Bailey of Oxfam. "We would have liked to see stronger wording,
but the declaration does have a clear political statement that public
health concerns must override commercial interests."
"Countries can ensure access to medicines without fear of being
dragged into a legal battle," said Ellen 't Hoen of Médecins Sans
Frontières. "Now it is up to governments to use these powers to bring
down the cost of medicines and increase access to life-saving
treatments."
A declaration on TRIPS and public health adopted today clearly
recognized the potentially lethal side-effects of the TRIPS agreement
and gave teeth to the measures that countries can use to counteract
them. These measures include the right to grant compulsory licenses
(overriding patents) and the freedom to determine the grounds upon
which such licenses are granted. The Doha declaration acknowledged
that these options are not limited to emergency situations. However,
if countries do declare an emergency, they can issue compulsory
licenses without prior negotiation with the patent owner. It is
countries themselves that determine what constitutes an emergency
situation.
The declaration also leaves countries the freedom to decide on their
own rules for implementing parallel imports. Parallel importation
allows a country to shop around for the best price of a branded drug
on the global market. In addition, least developed countries (LDCs)
were given a 10 year extension to comply with TRIPS - this means that
the deadline for compliance is now 2016 for LDCs, at the earliest.
The Doha declaration is a road map for using the flexibilities of the
TRIPS Agreement to protect public health", said James Love of Consumer
Project on Technology. "It sets the standards to measure any bilateral
or regional trade agreement."
"Doha is a major advance in rebalancing the TRIPS Agreement. The next
step is to ensure that next year's scheduled review of TRIPS takes a
hard look at what kind of patenting is really suitable for developing
countries", said Cecilia Oh of the Third World Network.
The biggest disappointment is that the meeting failed to resolve the
issue of where countries with insufficient or no manufacturing
capacity for pharmaceuticals will obtain drugs under a compulsory
license. The developing countries asked the WTO to authorize the
export of medicines under article 30 of the TRIPS (limited
exceptions), but the WTO ministerial conference has deferred the
issue to the TRIPS Council, which is instructed to find a solution
before the end of 2002.
Contacts:
Daniel Berman (+ 41 79 286 9649),
Cecilia Oh,
Jamie Love,
Zafar Mirza,
Michael Bailey,
Ellen 't Hoen (5391780 or + 33 6 223 75871)
Médecins Sans Frontières
Third World Network
+ 60 12 485 1951
Consumer Project on Technology
539 2726 or + 1 202 361 3040
Health Action International/The Network
+947 411996
OXFAM
+ 44 79 681 96102 or + 44 77 643 49967