|
Uganda
Needs a Patent Regime
That Is Pro Health
by Lydia Mugambe
As
the global HIV/AIDS epidemic
has turned into a major
crisis and as the death
toll mounts, one area
of human rights- the right
to health - has become
fiercely contested. In
particular the degree
to which patents on medicines
impede what the United
Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights has described
as the "human right"
of access to essential
medicines is receiving
close scrutiny. The controversy
generated by Attaran and
Gillespie's article arguing,
"in Africa patents
and patent law are not
a major barrier to treatment
access in and of themselves"
is evidence of the intensity
of the debate. More importantly,
advocacy for the right
to health and treatment
in particular is pitting
developing country interests
against those of the rich
world and pharmaceutical
companies. Advocacy for
access to treatments is
leading to careful moral
and legal scrutiny of
patents taken out on medicines,
new attempts to define
the boundaries to intellectual
property, and calls for
a re negotiation of the
world trade rules.
Central
to this debate is the
World Trade Organization
(WTO)- Trade Related Aspects
of Intellectual Property
Agreement (TRIPS), which
is annex 1C to the WTO
convention resulting from
the Uruguay Round of multi
lateral trade negotiations
concluded in 1994, and
came into force with the
WTO on January 1, 1995.
It sets out rules members
of the WTO must follow
in setting up systems
to protect intellectual
property rights within
their borders specifying,
for example, that such
rights must be granted
to foreign innovators
in the same measure as
they are to domestics,
and that nationals of
no particular WTO member
country must be favored
over those of others.
The
interests of the developing
world were not in any
way a priority at the
Uruguay Round that resulted
in the WTO and TRIPS.
The inclusion of discussions
of intellectual property
in the Uruguay Round was
primarily the instigation
of multi national corporations
(MNCs) and their allies
who had demonstrated an
impressive capacity to
push their interests in
Washington and Geneva.
From a profit angle, justification
of such lobbying must
have been entrenched in
the potential for future
foreign investment and
sales. While on the other
hand, developing countries
opposed such inclusion
of intellectual property
under the WTO regime on
the basis that such measures
reinforce the claims of
inventors and producers
at the expense of economic
and welfare needs of the
poor in the developing
world. Particularly the
protection of holders
of rights to patented
food and medicines, for
example has had the effect
of increasing the cost
of these items in developing
and least developed countries.
The negotiating capacity
of developing countries
was also skewed due to
considerable difference
in the specialist knowledge
available to them in the
conduct of extremely complex
discussions. While developed
countries were able to
mobilize teams composed
of top specialists in
the various areas dealt
with; developing countries
lacked the necessary technical
support. Indeed the asymmetries
within the discussions
resulting in and the TRIPS
itself are important to
note.
However, in view of the
fact that many developing
countries are already
members of the WTO and
effectively bound by the
TRIPS, (Uganda having
signed the WTO Agreement
on 1st January 1995) we
have to accept for better
or worse that it is a
done deal and identify
best means to wring from
it.
In
the context of drugs,
patent rights over disclosed
inventions of goods including
medicines, accruing to
holders for a minimum
of twenty years is the
most alarming in the agreement.
However in the exceptions
and the requirement for
exhaustion of intellectual
property rights, TRIPS
provides flexibilities
within which states can
maneuver especially in
regard to the right to
health care. Under TRIPS,
compulsory licensing and
parallel importing are
some of the avenues open
for adoption by member
states.
Compulsory
licensing is permission
by the government or a
judge for use of a generic
drug without the consent
of the patent holder of
such generic drug. Categorically
compulsory licenses apply
mainly to generic or common
drugs that usually can
be substitutes for expensive
brand named drugs. On
the other hand, parallel
importing is the purchasing
of proprietary drugs from
a third party in another
country rather than the
local manufacturer or
his agent. Varying factors
prevailing in different
countries result in different
prices of the same drug
in different countries,
parallel importing seeks
to exploit this situation.
The influence from foreign
governments and MNCs at
the time of implementing
these policies at the
national level mystifies
the other wise well justified
right to health, hindering
their implementation.
My
view that an open policy
against AIDS does not
necessarily translate
into a reduction of the
infection levels notwithstanding,
I proudly concede that
Uganda has made a name
the world over for its
open policy against AIDS.
That said however such
pride remains to be tested
by the patent regime that
the Uganda Law Reform
Commission is cudgeling
with.
As
the Commission shapes
our patent laws to come
in line with the TRIPS
standards, at the very
least the adoption of
avenues that unequivocally
allow compulsory licensing,
parallel importing and
other progressive measures
for the realization of
the right to health should
not be sacrificed.
|