| Row Over Seizure of Low-cost Drugs Exposes Dangers of TRIP-Plus Measures |
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South Bulletin (Issue 41): 22 September 2009
Martin Khor
A global controversy has arisen over the seizure of low-cost generic medicine in European ports in transit from India to other developing countries. This has deprived patients from having access to medicines that treat many ailments including AIDS, heart ailments, Alzheimer’s disease, psychological problems and high blood pressure. The medicines were being shipped mainly from India, where they were produced by generic drug producers, to Latin American and African countries. En route to their final destinations, the drugs were seized in airports in the Netherlands and Germany, when the planes were in transit, on the grounds that they could be “counterfeit” products. Often, the Customs’ actions were instigated by complaints from big European companies alleging that the medicine may be counterfeit and violate their intellectual property. However, it turned out that the medicines were not counterfeit product nor in violation of patent laws, but legitimately produced by Indian companies and being imported by Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Mexico, Nigeria and other developing countries at prices much lower than the branded drugs. The seizure has caused outrage among the governments exporting and importing the drugs and health groups. They are concerned that sick people are being deprived of low-cost medicines, and that some European governments are blocking legitimate trade between developing countries in order to unfairly promote the commercial interests of their big drug companies.
According to the Wall Street Journal of Aug 6, there have been more than 20 cases since late last year when Customs officials in the Netherlands and Germany held up the Indian medicines, saying they violated European patent laws, even though the drugs were not intended for sale there. The European countries are said to be especially misusing the European Commission’s Regulation 1383/2003, which allows the seizure of medical shipments if they are suspected of containing counterfeits or infringing intellectual property laws. In August, the Indian Commerce Minister Anand Sharma said his government had protested to the European Union that its action was “absolutely wrong”. The Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry said the country’s pharmaceutical companies had been “severely hit”. The Indian companies are incurring extra costs by making use of transit hubs outside of Europe and to hire lawyers to defend them against the European actions.
A group of 16 non-governmental organisations have also protested against the Dutch and German actions.
Brazil said that trade in generic medicine is perfectly legal and generics must not be mistaken for counterfeit or pirated products. The European Customs’ actions have hampered the access of the developing world to affordable life-saving generic medicine. India complained that seizure has continued to take place at European ports, despite its protests at the WTO months ago. It has an adverse systemic impact on legitimate trade of generic medicines, South-South commerce, and universal access to medicine.
China, Cuba, Colombia, Ecuador, Egypt, Argentina, Venezuela and South Africa also spoke against the European actions.
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