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WTO and medicines: from Doha to Cancún

WTO and medicines: from Doha to Cancún. Germán Velásquez Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy World Health Organization Geneva, October 2003. Failure of the WTO Ministerial Conference September 2003.

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WTO and medicines: from Doha to Cancún

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  1. WTO and medicines: from Doha to Cancún Germán Velásquez Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy World Health Organization Geneva, October 2003

  2. Failure of the WTO Ministerial Conference September 2003... • “(…) instead of global rules negotiated by all, in the interest of all, and adhered to by all, there is too much closed-door decision-making, too much protection of special interests (…) and the victims can be counted in the billions.” (1) (1) Message of the UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan to WTO Ministerial Conference in Cancún, 10 September 2003

  3. The TRIPS Agreement and medicines • Patent protection for pharmaceutical products • Reinforcement of patent process • 20 year minimum duration • Transitional periods with exclusive marketing rights • Enforcement

  4. TRIPS/Public Health tensions • HIV epidemic - pricing of ARVs • Challenge to South Africa Law (compulsory licences and parallel imports) • USA/Brazil on compulsory licences • Bilateral trade/IPR agreements

  5. Safeguards in TRIPS for public health • Parallel imports • Exceptions to exclusive rights (“Bolar”) • Compulsory licences • Government non-commercial use • Extension of the transitional periods

  6. WTO Doha/Health Negotiations On 14 November 2001, WTO Members issued the historic Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health

  7. The Doha Declaration ... Calls for: Interpretation and implementation of the TRIPS Agreement to support WTO Members’ rights to protect public health, particularly access to medicines.

  8. Paragraph 6 of the Doha Declaration The Council for TRIPS must: • Find a solution to the problem of WTO Members with insufficient or no pharmaceutical manufacturing capacity; • Report to the General Council before the end of 2002.

  9. Pending Problem of Paragraph 6 Permission for third parties to make, sell and export patented medicines and other health technologies to address public health needs

  10. The Council for TRIPS: • Held five formal meetings and several informal discussions (post-Doha to end 2002); • Failed to reach a consensus.

  11. 30 August 2003 Decision on Paragraph 6 • In good faith to protect public health and … not for industrial or commercial objectives • Need to establish the lack of manufacturing capacity • Notification to Council for TRIPS (name, quantity, period) and website • 2 compulsory licences (importing and exporting country) • Compulsory licence only to export specified amount • Specific labelling or marking measures to prevent re-export • Compensation

  12. 30 August 2003 Decision on Paragraph 6 • Is the “decision” a “solution” ? • Implementation will tell us...

  13. International Community Responsibility Ensure that medicines and vaccines are affordable and accessible to the millions of people who need them

  14. Next steps... • We must monitor the implementation of the decision to ensure: • Stability to guarantee its longevity; • Transparency; • Simple and speedy legal procedures; • Equal opportunities for countries needing medicines; • Facilitation of a multiplicity of potential suppliers; • Broad coverage in terms of health problems and range of medicines.

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