US bullying on intellectual property and health in TPPA talk
24 November 2013
For immediate
release
Outrageous US bullying on
intellectual property and health in TPPA talks in Salt Lake
City
‘The US has adopted a strategy of
exhaustion in its bullying of negotiators on the crucial
intellectual property chapter to force countries to trade
away health in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement
negotiations in Salt Lake City’, according to Professor
Jane Kelsey from the University of Auckland, New Zealand,
who is monitoring the negotiations.
‘The US has
stepped up its aggression as they move towards their “end
point” of the TPPA ministerial meeting in Singapore from 7
to 10 December’, said Professor Kelsey.
The group
on IP and medicines is being chaired by Assistant US Trade
Representative for Intellectual Property and Innovation Stan
McCoy.
‘This is a loaded game’, Professor
Kelsey said. ‘McCoy sets the agenda and timetable.
Negotiators are working from morning until late at night and
preparing to work all night, if necessary.’
The
US has around twenty people in Salt Lake City for the
intellectual property chapter, who can rotate. Some
countries have only one delegate for crucial talks on
intellectual property on medicines. Their negotiations on
medicines have been extended beyond the dates that were
scheduled before negotiators came. They have continued
despite the fact that some health negotiators, especially
from poor countries, could not extend their stay.
This follows a pattern of abuse over recent rounds
reported in Inside US Trade and other media, where
McCoy has acted as a gatekeeper, deciding what proposals
from other countries are allowed into the text and what are
not.
‘This is a crucial period for New Zealand
and a number of other countries’, Kelsey observed. The
text posted by Wikileaks last week shows they have tabled an
alternative to the US proposed text that has been repeatedly
rejected.
‘This is an early warning of the
extreme bullying that can be expected in when the trade
ministers seek to close the deal off in December’,
Professor Kelsey warned.
‘New Zealand’s trade
minister Tim Groser and his counterparts from the other ten
countries must tell the US to stop this behaviour now’,
she
said.
ENDS