|
Declaration on
the Trips Agreement and Public Health
Fourth WTO
Ministerial Conference
Doha, November 14, 2001
1. We
recognize the gravity of the public health
problems afflicting many developing and least-developed
countries, especially those resulting from HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, malaria and other epidemics.
2. We stress
the need for the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS
Agreement) to be part of the wider national
and international action to address these
problems.
3. We
recognize that intellectual property
protection is important for the development of
new medicines. We also recognize the concerns
about its effects on prices.
4. We agree
that the TRIPS Agreement does not and should
not prevent Members from taking measures to
protect public health. Accordingly, while
reiterating our commitment to the TRIPS
Agreement, we affirm that the Agreement can
and should be interpreted and implemented in a
manner supportive of WTO Members' right to
protect public health and, in particular, to
promote access to medicines for all.
In this
connection, we reaffirm the right of WTO
Members to use, to the full, the provisions in
the TRIPS Agreement, which provide flexibility
for this purpose.
5.
Accordingly and in the light of paragraph 4
above, while maintaining our commitments in
the TRIPS Agreement, we recognize that these
flexibilities include:
(a) In
applying the customary rules of
interpretation of public international law,
each provision of the TRIPS Agreement shall
be read in the light of the object and
purpose of the Agreement as expressed, in
particular, in its objectives and principles.
(b) Each
Member has the right to grant compulsory
licences and the freedom to determine the
grounds upon which such licences are granted.
(c) Each
Member has the right to determine what
constitutes a national emergency or other
circumstances of extreme urgency, it being
understood that public health crises,
including those relating to HIV/AIDS,
tuberculosis, malaria and other epidemics,
can represent a national emergency or other
circumstances of extreme urgency.
(d) The
effect of the provisions in the TRIPS
Agreement that are relevant to the
exhaustion of intellectual property rights
is to leave each Member free to establish
its own regime for such exhaustion without
challenge, subject to the MFN and national
treatment provisions of Articles 3 and 4.
6. We
recognize that WTO Members with insufficient
or no manufacturing capacities in the
pharmaceutical sector could face difficulties
in making effective use of compulsory
licensing under the TRIPS Agreement. We
instruct the Council for TRIPS to find an
expeditious solution to this problem and to
report to the General Council before the end
of 2002.
7. We
reaffirm the commitment of developed-country
Members to provide incentives to their
enterprises and institutions to promote and
encourage technology transfer to least-developed
country Members pursuant to Article 66.2.
We also agree that the least-developed
country Members will not be obliged, with
respect to pharmaceutical products, to
implement or apply Sections 5 and 7 of Part II
of the TRIPS Agreement or to enforce rights
provided for under these Sections until 1
January 2016, without prejudice to the right
of least-developed country Members to seek
other extensions of the transition periods as
provided for in Article 66.1 of the TRIPS
Agreement. We instruct the Council for TRIPS
to take the necessary action to give effect to
this pursuant to Article 66.1 of the TRIPS
Agreement.
|