MSF Statement
Geneva, 12 February 03. In ongoing negotiations in Tokyo this week, the WTO
is discussing a deal that could severely limit developing countries' access
to affordable medicines. Médecins Sans Frontières strongly urges WTO
members to reject the latest proposal by the chair of the TRIPS Council to
restrict use of compulsory licensing for many developing countries to
"national emergencies or other circumstances of extreme urgency". Wealthy
countries do not have to declare national emergencies to make use of TRIPS
safeguards. Why should developing countries have to do so?
"In Africa, pneumonia is the second biggest killer after HIV/AIDS," says Dr
Bernard Pécoul, director of the Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines.
"Will countries declare pneumonia a national emergency? It is hard to
imagine. If they do, will they also declare emergencies for diarrhoeal
diseases?"
The adoption of the TRIPS Council chairman's proposal would mean that
countries without the possibility to produce medicines are at a major
disadvantage over countries that do have the capacity. In theory, they
could issue a compulsory licence to address any public health problem; but
in practice, they will only be able to get supplies of the medicines if
they declare a national emergency. These countries would have to wait for a
public health problem to spin out of control before they can use this
solution to address it.
Already during the TRIPS Agreement and the Doha Declaration on TRIPS and
Public Health, developing countries resisted strong pressure to have
compulsory licensing provisions limited to emergency situations. Giving in
to this emergency language now would be a massive blow to the progress
painstakingly achieved over many years.
MSF strongly urges all WTO members to reject the Chairman's reference to
emergencies and any other attempt to limit the terms of the agreement.
"Throughout negotiations last year, the US tried to limit the agreement to
a set list of diseases" explains Ellen 't Hoen, Médecins Sans Frontières.
"This was unacceptable, and developing countries rightly rejected the
notion. But this current bid by the TRIPS Council chairman to restrict the
agreement to national emergencies would in fact be far worse. We cannot let
a handful of WTO members yield to industry pressure and cripple developing
countries' access to life-saving medicines."
MSF has sent an open letter to the WTO, which can be found on
www.accessmed-msf.org.
For further information contact:
Christopher Garrison + 44 772 470622
Ingrid Cox +41 22 849 8401 (European time)
Kris Torgeson +1 917 913 0183 (US time).
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