To: H.E. Dinesh
K. Pataik, Ambassador of the Republic of India in Cambodia
EU-INDIA FREE
TRADE AGREEMENT ON GENERIC DRUGS
Phnom Penh, April
9, 2013
Dear H.E Dinesh
K. Pataik
We, Cambodian
garment workers, sex workers, entertainment workers, people living with HIV,
LGBTs, university students, feminists and human right activists from different
networks and organisations came together to express our concern about the
threat posed by the forthcoming EU-India free trade agreement to the lives of
millions of people in Cambodia and many other developing countries across the
world. Numerous reports inform us that the FTA negotiation between the EU and
India is about to conclude. We are concerned that the EU-India FTA will create another
uneven and unequal relation of so-called free trade that more often than not
favours richer countries and larger businesses at the expense of poor farmers
and workers in developing countries. More importantly, we are particularly
alarmed by the severe damage that the forthcoming EU-India FTA may cause to the
lives of millions of people in poor countries like Cambodia.
We have been
informed about the repeated attempt of the EU to include Intellectual Property
Rights provisions that are very likely to undermine the stable supply of
affordable life-saving medicines to poorer parts of the world. It is extremely
worrisome that, despite assurance made by the Indian government regarding its
determination not to include any measures hampering the production and
provision of affordable generic medicines, the EU continues to put pressure on
the Indian counterpart to accept Data Exclusivity, Intellectual Property
Enforcement Measures and Investment Rules, all of which are designed to protect
the interests of European pharmaceutical giants by curbing the availability of
generic medicines cheaply produced in India. It is apparent that these
provisions aim to secure bigger profits for large European pharmaceutical
corporations and discourage production of cheap generic medicines in India,
which have been saving millions of lives across the world.
We are saddened that
behind the rhetoric of democracy, human rights and freedom the EU is in fact
prioritising corporate interests to the lives of millions of people. It is
needless to say that those affordable generic drugs are absolutely vital for
the lives of millions who otherwise cannot afford expensive treatment of life
threatening diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria and HIV-AIDS. Many suffering
from such serious diseases would not be able to survive without these generic
drugs produced in India. In Cambodia alone, 75,000 people living with HIV rely
heavily on generic medicines for their survival. According to the projection of
the Cambodia’s National Center for HIV/AIDS (NCHADS), Dermatology and STI,
48,000 out of 75,000 people living with HIV are now on ARVs and Cambodia relies
hugely on the generic drugs supported by donors. According to UNAIDS, in 2009
the budget spent of treatment service is about US$15 million per year. We
believe that if generic drugs from India made unavailable HIV treatment cost
for each Cambodian patient will increase about 15 times from current US$175 to
more than US$2,500 a month. Any measures to make such treatment unaffordable to
the poor population will pose an imminent threat to the lives of those people
and their families including their children.
Having seen the
importance of made-in-India generic drugs for the lives of millions, we in no
ways can express our frustration about the attempt of EU and European
pharmaceutical giants to control the production of these cheap medicines. This
must stop right now. It is a true example of putting profits before people’s
lives and take advantage of people’s illness for corporate profits. Our lives
should not be regarded as a business opportunity. We urge the EU to reconsider its pursuit of
intellectual property rights for medicines and to realise that blindly
protecting the interests of large European pharmaceutical corporations will
lead to nothing but a subtle form of genocide of the poor, their families and
children in developing countries across the world.
WE DEMAND:
1.
The EU to stop attempting to introduce measures aiming to undermine the
production and distribution of Indian generic drugs essential for the lives of
millions of people across the world.
2.
The EU to stop using FTA to threaten India and sovereignty of the Indian
people.
3.
The EU to take PEOPLE before profit.
4.
The Indian government to resist such attempts of the EU and by all means
continue producing and distributing generic drugs for the welfare of the poor.
5.
All governments to discard all kinds of FTAs that affect people in poor
countries negatively.
We
the Cambodian grassroots people from different networks and organisations again
strongly urge the EU and Indian government to think about the long-term
consequence of such a trade agreement in order for them not to be remembered as
a threat to humanity. Otherwise, they will face a huge pressure from international
civil society and people’s movements for human dignity. We will continue to
struggle against such an attempt to turn our lives into business opportunities,
in solidarity with people of India and other developing countries who deserve
decent healthy life as much as anyone in the developed world.
OUR
LIVES ARE NOT FOR SALE!
HEALTH
CARE IS NOT A COMMODITY!
9
April 2013, endorsed by Cambodian networks and organisations including:
1.
Action for Environment and Communities (AEC)
2.
Cambodian Prostitute Union (CPU)
3.
Cambodian Community of Women Living with HIV (CCW)
4.
Cambodian MSM Positive Network (CMPN+)
5.
Cambodian Network of Men and Women for Development (CNMWD)
6.
Cam-ASEAN
7.
Messenger Band (MB)
8.
National Network of Entertainment Workers (NNEW)
9.
People’s Action for Change
10.
Rainbow Community Kampuchea (RoCK)
11.
Social Action for Change
12.
Women’s Network for Unity (WNU)
13.
Worker’s Information Center (WIC)
“Revolutionaries
do not make revolutions! The revolutionaries are those who know when
power is lying in the street and when they can pick it up.”
― Hannah Arendt
― Hannah Arendt
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