|
OXFAM
TAKES ON PHARMACEUTICAL GIANT NOVARTIS
(14 November 2006)
Oxfam
has taken on the pharmaceutical giant Novartis in its latest campaign
of putting patients before patents. Oxfam activists demand that
developing countries are granted the right to produce affordable
medicines. On 14 November 2006, activists recreated a hospital ward
in Victoria, Central London, posing as patients who have been diagnosed
too poor for medicines. The activists are asking world
leaders and giant pharmaceuticals companies to stop denying poor
people access to lifesaving medicines.
In
fact, 14 November 2006 marks the fifth anniversary of the Doha
Declaration, a formal trade declaration signed by world leaders
to put health before profits. Today, during a high-level panel debate
in London, Oxfam released a new report, Patents vs. Patients:
Five Years After the Doha Declaration; the report states that
rich countries are taking little or no action towards their obligations
to help poor countries protect public health and are in some cases
actually undermining the declaration.
DOHA
DECLARATION ON TRIPS
The
Doha Declaration on the Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Right (TRIPS) Agreement and Public Health was adopted by all the
members of the World Trade Organisation on 14th November 2001. It
was a victory for developing countries, because it said that developing
countries must be able to use public health safeguards written into
the WTOs intellectual property rules (called TRIPS) in order
to access cheaper generic versions of patented medicines. For example,
countries can look for the best price to import a branded from another
country and not directly from a pharmaceutical company in the interests
of public health. Also, generic competition is the most sustainable
way to keep the price of medicines down, says Oxfam.
Instead,
five years on after the Declaration, poor people in developing countries
are still suffering and dying because they cannot access essential
and lifesaving medicines. Rich countries, and the US in particular,
are complicit in pharmaceutical companies attempts to block
production of cheaper versions of their medicines in developing
countries. They also actively push free trade agreements, which
will enforce much stricter patent and related intellectual property
rules that violate the promises made in Doha.
Rich
countries have broken the spirit of the Doha Declaration,
said Oxfams Make Trade Fair campaign head Celine Charveriat.
The declaration said the right things but needed political
action to work. That hasnt happened. Weve gone backwards.
People are still suffering or dying needlessly.
LEGAL
CHALLENGE TO PRODUCE ANTI-CANCER DRUG
In
2005, cancer patients groups in India used intellectual property
law to stop a patent application by the Swiss company Novartis for
its anti cancer drug, Glivec. This meant that Indian companies could
continue making generic versions of Glivec at £1,400 per year,
as opposed to the Novartis monopoly priced version of the same drug
for sale at more than £14,000 per year.
However
Novartis recently appealed the courts decision in a direct
challenge to Indias right to interpret the TRIPS Agreement
to protect public health. If Novartis is successful, it could jeopardise
Indias generic medicines export industry. Currently Indias
67% of inexpensive medicines export goes to developing countries.
Novartis
has told Oxfam that there is no commercial market for Glivec in
India and that it is challenging India in order to align Indian
intellectual property law with TRIPS, Charveriat says. However,
India is only trying to use the flexibilities rightfully available
to it under TRIPS and Novartis is trying to block that right.
Oxfam is asking for an end to the lawsuit pursued by Novartis against
the Indian Government.
Since
2001 things have become worse for sick people in developing countries.
Cancer is increasingly affecting people in developing countries,
and its rate is due to double by 2020; diabetes has risen from 30
million to 230 million people in the past 20 years with most new
cases now reported in poorer countries.
In
2005, more than 4 million people were newly infected by HIV. Still,
according to the World Health Organization 74% of AIDS medicines
are still under monopoly, 77% of Africans still have no access to
AIDS treatment, and 30% of the worlds population still do
not have regular access to essential medicines.
Rich
countries must live up to their commitments and stop undermining
the Doha Declaration with their selfish actions, Charveriat
said. Now more than ever we need a global trading system that
puts health before profit and makes medicines affordable for all.
Top
|