The US, EU, Switzerland and Japan are renewing efforts to push back against India’s laws and policies to increase access to affordable generic medicines.

MSF launched the campaign as the eighth round of negotiations for the RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership) trade agreement were taking place in Kyoto, Japan, which contains harmful proposals that would undermine access to medicines.
More than 80% of the medicines MSF uses to treat over 200,000 people living with HIV in its projects are Indian generics, and MSF sources essential medicines from India to treat other diseases, including tuberculosis and malaria. India also produces affordable versions of medicines for non-communicable diseases, now considered too expensive even for healthcare systems in developed countries.
“As doctors who have been relying on affordable medicines and vaccines made in India to do our work, we cannot afford to stand by silently as the tap of life-saving drugs gets turned off for people in our projects and beyond”, said Dr Joanne Liu, International President of MSF. “We want to send India a strong message of support as the world is watching anxiously to make sure it remains the ‘pharmacy of the developing world.”
India’s law sets the bar higher than other countries for what does and does not deserve a patent, in the interest of public health. This has allowed the robust generic competition to continue that has, for example, resulted in the price of a basic HIV treatment combination dropping by 99% over the course of a decade, from over $10,000 to around $100.
Through the RCEP negotiations, Japan is seeking to put in place several damaging provisions, all of which go beyond India’s obligations under international trade rules. They would allow companies to perpetually extend their monopolies by making modifications to existing medicines, a common pharmaceutical industry practice known as ‘ever greening.’
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Bilateral trade agreements under negotiation with the EU and European Free Trade Association (EFTA) —which also contained harmful provisions for access to medicines—had been stalled for years following intense push back from Indian negotiators and civil society, but talks are rumored to be starting again soon.
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“We have been working tirelessly for a decade and a half to make sure India can continue to be a lifeline for millions of people around the world who rely on affordable medicines to stay alive and healthy”, said Leena Menghaney, South Asia Director for MSF’s Access Campaign. “We shudder at the thought that we could lose everything and the multinational pharmaceutical industry could succeed in gutting generic competition from India so that profit reigns above people’s lives.”
In 2006, Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis notoriously took the Indian government to court in an effort to change the country’s patent law, after the company was denied a patent on a cancer drug.
The company lost its challenge in India’s Supreme Court seven years later, in a landmark ruling in April 2013. Nevertheless, the US, EU, Switzerland and now Japan are renewing efforts to push back against India’s laws and policies that make full use of public health flexibilities in international trade rules to increase access to affordable generic medicines. “Don’t trade away lives in the face of international pharmaceutical companies’ pressure, Prime Minister Modi,” said Menghaney.
Source-Medindia