E-DRUG: MSF responds to UK's disastrous proposal on intellectual property in UK-India Free Trade Agreement
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Leena Menghaney, South Asia Head, MSF�s Access Campaign:
�The UK�s demands are seeking to gut India�s patent and drug regulatory laws of the safeguards that make it a manufacturing powerhouse. India is a major supplier of many of the affordable, lifesaving generic medicines that MSF and many countries rely on to treat people with diseases like tuberculosis (TB), malaria, and HIV/AIDS. The excessive measures included in the draft IP chapter of the UK-India FTA could jeopardize this.
�Introducing more and more IP hoops for generic manufacturers in India to jump through will have a chilling effect on the country�s ability to supply millions of people around the world with affordable, lifesaving generic medicines. For example, next year, the basic patent on one of the most expensive TB drugs, delamanid, is set to expire, but measures contained in the FTA would delay the availability of more affordable generic delamanid by several years.
�The Indian government must reject these harmful IP provisions and demonstrate its commitment to retaining robust and sustainable production of lifesaving generic medicines at affordable prices.
�Given the disastrous consequences this leaked IP chapter could have on the global supply of generic medicines, the UK government should withdraw it completely. India should stay vigilant and not allow barriers to affordable medicines to be written into FTA negotiations.�
Carinne Bruneton
E-MED@healthnet.org
carinne.bruneton@gmail.com