And now:[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

From: GRAIN Los Banos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
BIO-IPR docserver
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TITLE: U.S. Patent Office Cancels Patent on Sacred "Ayahuasca" Plant
AUTHOR: Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL)
PUBLICATION: CIEL Press Release
DATE: 4 November 1999
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For Immediate Release
Thursday, November 4, 1999 

U.S. PATENT OFFICE ADMITS ERROR, CANCELS PATENT ON SACRED 
"AYAHUASCA" PLANT 

Indigenous Leaders, Legal Experts Hail Decision to Cancel "Flawed 
Patent" on Sacred Plant from the Amazon, But Call for Reforms to Prevent 
Future Abuses

Washington, D.C. - Indigenous peoples from nine South American 
countries won a precedent-setting victory yesterday, as the U.S. Patent 
and Trademark Office (PTO) canceled the patent issued to a U.S. citizen 
for the "ayahuasca" vine. 

The plant, Banisteriopsis caapi, is native to the Amazonian rainforest. 
Thousands of indigenous people of the region use it in sacred religious 
and healing ceremonies, as part of their traditional religions. 

The PTO's decision came in response to a request for reexamination of 
the patent filed with the PTO in March by the Coordinating Body for the 
Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin (COICA), the Coalition for 
Amazonian Peoples and Their Environment, and lawyers at the Center for 
International Environmental Law (CIEL). 

"Our Shamans and Elders were greatly troubled by this patent. Now they 
are celebrating. This is an historic day for indigenous peoples 
everywhere," says Antonio Jacanamijoy, General Coordinator of COICA. 
According to David Rothschild, director of the Amazon Coalition, "Given 
that ayahuasca is used in sacred indigenous ceremonies throughout the 
Amazon, this patent never should have been issued in the first place."

The PTO based its rejection of the patent on the fact that publications 
describing Banisteriopsis caapi were "known and available" prior to the 
filing of the patent application. According to patent law, no 
invention can be patented if described in printed publications more than 
one year prior to the date of the patent application. William Anderson, 
director of the University of Michigan Herbarium, agreed that the PTO 
needs to improve its procedures for researching applications.

CIEL lawyer David Downes noted that "while we are pleased that the PTO 
has cancelled this flawed patent, we are concerned that the PTO still 
has not dealt with the flaws in its policies that made it possible for 
someone to patent this plant in the first place." He explained that 
"the PTO needs to change its rules to prevent future patent claims based 
on the traditional knowledge and use of a plant by indigenous 
peoples." He also argued that "the PTO should face the issue head-on 
of whether it is ethical for patent applicants to claim private rights 
over a plant or knowledge that is sacred to a cultural or ethnic group."

In a separate proceeding at the PTO, the three groups have called for 
changes in PTO rules. They argue that the PTO should require that 
patent applicants identify all biological resources and traditional 
knowledge that they used in developing the claimed invention. 

Applicants should also disclose the geographical origin, and provide 
evidence that the source country and indigenous community consented to 
its use.

Contacts: 
Kris Genovese, CIEL (1-202) 785-8700 
David Rothschild, Amazon Coalition (1-202) 785-3334

ABOUT GRAIN -- For general information about GRAIN, kindly visit our website 
http://www.grain.org or write us at <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. 

Reprinted under the Fair Use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html doctrine 
of international copyright law.
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