Braving snow and blizzard warnings, health, labor and environmental
activists rallied outside a New York City hotel on Monday where industry
leaders met with international trade representatives to commence the
"final negotiations" over the secret text of the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
Leading the protest and carrying signs that read "Hands Off Our
Medicine," protesters with health groups Doctors Without Borders and
Health Global Access Project (GAP) warned that the TPP will undermine efforts to ensure access to affordable, life-saving medicines in both the United States and abroad.
Roughly one hundred people, including the Teamsters and the Raging Grannies,
joined the health activists in chanting "Derail Fast Track," in
reference to the Administration's push to pass the agreement quickly
without Congressional interference.
"The TPP would create a vicious cycle. The provisions currently
proposed will allow for fracking and other practices that fuel
environmental degradation and make people sick. Strengthened
intellectual property rules will then prevent people from accessing
life- saving medicines," said Michael Tikili, national field organizer
for Health GAP, in a press statement. "Thirteen million people living
with HIV depend on generic AIDS medicines and another 20-plus million
are waiting line for treatment. By protecting Pharma’s bloated profits,
the Obama administration is undermining its own global AIDS
initiative—this isn’t a trade agreement—it’s a death pact."
As Tikili further explained to Common Dreams, national efforts
to end epidemics such as HIV and Hepititis C are being thwarted by the
prospective trade laws which would threaten generic manufacturers in
countries with patent suits. For instance, Tikili says, the U.S.
government says it is "going to war on HIV" while at the same time
pushing laws that limit drug production and access in certain countries.
"It is a public health issue, a global health issue," Tikili said.
"Countries are trying to fight epidemics and this really limits that. It
puts the process over people."
Most of the agreement details have been so kept in the shadows that
many members of Congress have not seen the text. What little is known
has been revealed through leaks.
According to Health GAP, leaked drafts of the TPP revealed that the
U.S. is seeking stronger, longer, and more accessible patent monopolies
on medicines and new monopolies on drug regulatory data that would
prevent marketing of more affordable generic equivalents. The TPP will
reportedly also place some of the "most severe intellectual property
rules ever demanded in international trade," including strict price
control measures and enhanced investor rights that would permit Big
Pharma to sue governments when they expect profits will be undermined by
government policy.
from here
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