The Fifth Anniversary of Doha Declaration marks broken promises. Government leaders, through their inability to fulfil the promises made in the Doha Declaration, have failed millions of people around the world whose lives depend on access to essential medicines.
The Doha declaration notes that trade rules should support countries' right to protect public health, particularly "access to medicines for all".
Campaigners call for more commitment on alternative ways of balancing intellectual property rights and public health.
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COUNTRIES MUST MAKE MORE USE OF TRIPS FLEXIBILITIES
"Government leaders, through their inability to fulfil the promises made in the Doha Declaration, have failed millions of people around the world whose lives depend on access to essential medicines," states Marcel van Soest, executive director of the World AIDS Campaign.
To mark the anniversary of Doha, Oxfam is hosting a high-level panel discussion that questions whether the implementation of the declaration has happened.
At the 2001 Ministerial Conference in Doha, Qatar, Members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) adopted the groundbreaking “Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health,” which unequivocally recognised that access to medicines should have primacy over commercial interests. The Doha Declaration confirmed some of the key flexibilities in the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights(TRIPS), and encouraged countries to interpret the treaty in a manner that would protect public health and promote access to medicines for all.