U.S.
industry body says India agreed to not issue
'compulsory' drug licenses
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[March 08, 2016]
By Zeba Siddiqui
MUMBAI (Reuters) - India has given private
assurances that it will not grant licenses allowing local firms to
override patents and make cheap copies of drugs by big Western
drugmakers, a U.S. business advocacy group said.
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The comments were revealed in a submission last month by the
U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC) to the U.S. Trade Representative
(USTR), which is reviewing global intellectual property laws for an
annual report identifying trade barriers to U.S. companies.
The USTR has placed India on its "priority watch" list for two years
in a row saying the country's patent laws unfairly favor local drug
makers. A bone of contention has been a legal provision that allows
the overriding of patents on original drugs and granting of
'compulsory licenses' to local firms to make cheaper copycat
medicines.
India can grant such licenses under certain conditions, such as
public health emergencies, to ensure access to affordable medicines
for its mostly poor people. It granted the first such license in
2012, allowing local firm Natco Ltd to sell a copy of German
drugmaker Bayer's <BAYGn.DE> cancer medicine Nexavar at a tenth of
the price.
Since that ruling, big Western pharmaceutical companies have
criticized India's patent law and lobbied for it to be changed.
In its submission to the USTR, a copy of which was seen by Reuters,
the USIBC said the Indian government "privately reassured" the group
that it would not grant such licenses to firms for commercial
purposes.
The Indian government has made no such statements publicly.
Officials have said they are committed to protecting the interests
of patients.
Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, her joint secretary in charge
of pharmaceuticals, and the USIBC did not respond to requests for
comment.
Washington-based non-profit Knowledge Ecology International (KEI)
expressed concern over the USIBC submission.
"If such an agreement in fact exists, this is extremely troubling
news ... this sort of pressure is basically a declaration of war on
poor cancer patients," KEI said in its own submission to the USTR
last week. It called for details of the agreement to be made public.
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Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India has been undertaking a
review of its intellectual property (IP) policy. A revised policy is
due to be released imminently.
Several health activists and charities like Medecins Sans Frontieres
have criticized the review, saying India is buckling under U.S.
pressure and compromising the interests of patients.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, the biggest U.S. industry lobby group,
have both recommended keeping India on the U.S. "priority watch"
list in separate submissions to the USTR.
The Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance, which represents 20 big drug
makers, argued in its own submission that India's patent laws were
fully WTO-compliant. Its head chided the USIBC for breaching
confidence in its submission.
"If the government of India had said something privately, USIBC
should not have embarrassed it by making it public," said Secretary
General D.G. Shah.
(Reporting by Zeba Siddiqui)
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