(Forgive poor formatting first time around... please send your name to: 
[email protected] )

On 4/24/2013 10:32 AM, Patrick Bond wrote:
 > -------- Original Message --------
 > Subject:     [Ip-health] Academics' Expert Letter on LDCs' TRIPS 
Extension Request
 > Date:     Mon, 22 Apr 2013 14:05:10 +0000
 > From:     Baker, Brook <[email protected]>
 > To:     IP-health listserve <[email protected]>
 >
 > Several of us are soliciting signatures from legal and other 
academics around the world who focus on human rights, intellectual 
property, trade, and development and who are in favor of the request by 
WTO least developed country Members that they be granted an extension of 
the time period within which they must become compliant with the TRIPS 
Agreement.  WTO LDC Members were initially given an extension with 
respect to all TRIPS requirements except national and most favored 
nation treatment until 2006.  That transition period was further 
extended until June 30, 2013 in 2005 (a separate extension was granted 
on pharmaceuticals only until 2016) but with some unfortunate conditions 
(beyond the unreasonably short term), such as a requirement that LDCs 
must keep their current level of IP protections, something that was not 
required by TRIPS Article 66.1. The  current request from LDC Members is 
for an unconditional extension of the transition period so long as an 
LDC Member is
 >  an LDC.  It is hoped that a longer and unconditional extension 
permitting rollback of improvidently adopted IP standards will allow 
LDCs to build their technological base and improve limiting domestic 
capacities.  This request has received support from 350 civil society 
organizations, from some industry groups, from several multilateral 
organizations, and from many developing country members of the WTO.
 >
 > We are seeking signatures beyond those who focus primarily on access 
to medicine, to academics who are also concerned about IP impacts in 
LDCs on access to information (especially IT, educational, and 
scientific resources), agricultural resources, green and climate 
control/mitigation technologies, and development more generally.  We 
already have 30 signers, including several leading international IP and 
trade experts.
 >
 > We need help getting the letter distributed to a broader group of 
global academics, so would greatly appreciate your efforts in this regard.
 >
 > There is some urgency since the US and EU are ramping up their 
pressure on LDCs to impose a short and highly conditionalized extension 
and the final TRIPS Council meeting will happen soon. Therefore, we will 
be collecting signatures until April 26.  Please send your sign-ons to 
me: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.
 >
 > Brook
 > Professor Brook K. Baker
 >
 > Health GAP (Global Access Project)
 > Northeastern U. School of Law
 > Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy
 > 400 Huntington Ave.
 > Boston, MA 02115 USA
 > Honorary Research Fellow, University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban, S. Africa
 > (w) 617-373-3217
 > (cell) 617-259-0760
 > (fax) 617-373-5056
 > [email protected]
 > _______________________________________________
 > Ip-health mailing list
 > [email protected]
 > http://lists.keionline.org/mailman/listinfo/ip-health_lists.keionline.org
 >

_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to