MELBOURNE, Australia--The
Sixth International Congress on AIDS in
Asia and the Pacific drew to a close Wednesday
after presentations of the congress manifesto,
the Ministerial Meeting communique and
a declaration from the Youth Forum.
The
largest conference on HIV/AIDS in the region, the Sixth
ICAAP succeeded in bringing together high-level political
decision makers with members of civil society who work
on the pandemic daily. Political commitment from Asia
and the Pacific was noticeably absent at the United
Nations Special Session on AIDS in June. In Melbourne
representatives of 33 countries came together Tuesday
for the first large high-level meeting to discuss the
impact of HIV/AIDS in the region. While no concrete
plan of action emerged from the meeting, the fact that
governments acknowledged the magnitude of the pandemic
is significant.
"I think this regional meeting has been
very effective as a first meeting to expose ministers
to views and attitudes of other countries and
as a way to confront a lot of difficult and sensitive
issues," said Australian Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer. "A meeting like this will
have a lasting impact because it sets the agenda
for the Asia-Pacific region. It means that HIV/AIDS
instead of being an issue of the United Nations
or one or two countries, becomes a major agenda
item for the region."
The morning plenary session, the last of the
conference, was packed as delegates waited for
ministers to arrive. As the seemingly endless
stream of ministers and bureaucrats entered the
John Batman auditorium, the delegates greeted
them with applause and a few cheers.
Downer,
the host of the ministerial session, announced
the commitment
of 50 million Australian
dollars to three major HIV/AIDS initiatives in
the area. "We will address HIV related harm
associated with injecting drug users in Asia,
HIV/AIDS and STD prevention in Indonesia and
we will assist Pacific Island countries on implementing
national HIV/AIDS strategies," he said.
The
Ministerial Statement is not binding, but does
express
the commitment of the governments
represented to step up domestic responses to
the epidemic. The statement also proposed to
set up an Asia-Pacific Leadership Forum on HIV/AIDS
forming a network of political leaders and parliamentarians.
Regional collaboration, it said could be achieved
through "regular meetings and ongoing communications
through the Internet." The statement also
said that the forum could led to the creation
of a resource center for political leaders.
Some delegates were disappointed that there
was no mention of antiretroviral drug therapy
and of finding ways to provide cheap drugs to
people living with HIV/AIDS in the region.
"This is a very complex issue," said
Downer in response to a question about providing
cheap drugs in the region. "One of the challenges
we have is the TRIPS (Trade Related Intellectual
Property Rights) provision of the WTO (World
Trade Organization). Work needs to be done on
that. Secondly in developing countries using
drugs of that kind is very complex. It's not
just a question of cutting the price, it's a
question of finding an international legal framework
where it actually works and putting infrastructure
into place. It's a laudable objective and we
have to work toward it, but we have to overcome
some hurdles first."
Developing countries drew up a statement at
the TRIPS Council meeting in June this year asking
for a change in the TRIPS provision regarding
drugs in the cases of 'national emergency, circumstances
of extreme urgency or in cases of public non-commercial
use.' The change would allow countries to acquire
cheaper AIDS drugs without obtaining a license
from the pharmaceutical companies which hold
the patents. Under TRIPS and patent laws, pharmaceutical
companies effectively hold 20 year monopolies
on drugs during which time prices are not regulated
in any way and licensing is done by the company
itself.
"If a company undertakes research and produces
a new, valuable drug then they deserve to have
a patent and make a profit," said Mary Moran,
Director of the Access to Essential Medicines
Campaign of Medecins Sans Frontier.
"But
it can't be a patent on life. We have to have
some moral imperatives. After the South
Africa case we saw prices come down some 90 percent.
These companies play hardball when people are
dying--it's phenomenal."
Current
brand name drug regimes can cost up to 10,000
US
dollars annually while generic drugs
can cost as little as 300 US dollars. "There's
more work to be done on TRIPS to assist developing
countries to take what is called 'TRIPS consistent
action' to get lowest cost HIV/AIDS treatment," said
Downer. "I don't think enough is known about
the boundaries of TRIPS and how that can all
work and that's why this is going to be very
a significant issue. [The Australian] position
is that obviously we would like to feel that
these drugs could be made available at the lowest
possible price, but that would have to be done
in a way that is consistent with international
law and hopefully an appropriate regime could
make that possible."
The United States and Switzerland recently released
a second declaration that focuses on the need
for health care infrastructure in developing
countries and on patent laws. Most pharmaceutical
companies that hold patents on HIV/AIDS drugs
are based in these two countries. Australia,
Canada and Japan have also signed onto this new
declaration. According to Moran the declaration
is a step back in the campaign for cheap AIDS
drugs in developing countries.
"Australia wants a compromise between the
US drug company position and what developing
countries want," said Moran. "There
is going to be conflict between the fact that
they offered to draft legislation on behalf of
developing countries and that at the same time
they're not accepting the developing countries'
statement on what they'd like that legislation
to achieve."
The TRIPS debate will continue in the coming
weeks and will be a major agenda item at the
WTO Ministerial meeting in November. In the meantime,
Moran said, she will be lobbying to get Australia
to reconsider its position and not support the
new declaration. While patents should be respected,
there has to be some control over pricing and
distribution, she said.
Apart from the ongoing debate about access to
drugs, the conference ended on a positive note.
Delegates exchanged business cards and phone
numbers as they left the closing ceremony, promising
to follow up on plans made during the conference.
The reactions to the conference were mixed.
"This was an amazing opportunity to meet
like-minded people and share information about
program implementation in our countries," said
one delegate.
"I feel very frustrated," said another. "So
much money has been spent and what have we gained?"
Some
groups, usually marginalized in their societies,
gained
a lot from this conference. "For
drug use issues I think this conference is the
best that has happened so far," said Jimmy
Dorabjee of the Asian Harm Reduction Network. "There
has been an enormous recognition of how injecting
drug use is driving the epidemic in this region."
Participants of the conference are taking home
renewed energy and hope in their fight against
HIV/AIDS. Now with the indication of political
commitment hopefully national prevention and
treatment programs will be strengthened.
"We know that every effective national
program around the world has had strong national
political leadership," said Rob Moodie,
Co-Chair of ICAAP and Chief Executive Officer
of VicHealth. The concrete outcomes of the
conference will not, however, be evident until
an assessment
at the Seventh ICAAP in Kobe, Japan in 2003. |