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WIPO: Share Wealth From
Bio-Prospecting
By Lisa Schlein
14 December 2006
Pharmaceutical
companies make billions of dollars from top-selling drugs. But, the
communities that harbor the traditional knowledge and genetic resources
from which these drugs are made, reap few benefits. The World
Intellectual Property Organization, which oversees patents, trademarks
and copyrights, has been working for the past five years to reach an
agreement that would help spread the wealth from products stemming from
traditional resources.
The Amazon jungle, the forests in Africa and Asia contain many hidden
treasures. Their plants, trees, and herbs provide the basis for most of
the world's disease-fighting drugs and many of its cosmetic and
beautifying remedies. For example, penicillin has been saving millions
of peoples' lives for decades. The anti-cancer drug Taxol and the
anti-malaria drug extracted from the Chinese herbal plant, Artemisin
offer hope to many.
"There is quite a substantial and well documented appropriation of
traditional knowledge, especially in the area of traditional
medicine-what is generally called bio-prospecting," explains Usman Sarki,
a minister in the Permanent Mission of Nigeria to Geneva. He says people
go into the African forests in search of medicinal plants, which are
then taken out of the continent and brought to Western and other
countries.
Wita, a Trio shaman of
Kwamalasamutu Village, Suriname with a staff and a plant in his hands
"And, laboratories develop them and extract active ingredients and make
useful drugs out of them without actually disclosing where this came
from, without actually plowing back benefits into the community where
they obtained these medicinal plants," he explained.
Sarki says developing countries are trying to curb this illegal
appropriation of traditional knowledge.
"So we African countries, supported by many other developing countries
and indigenous communities are saying that we need new rights…so that
they can now have a legal protection of their traditional knowledge," he
said.
"With traditional knowledge, I think it is very appropriate that we find
means of recognizing the contribution to humanity of traditional
knowledge systems," added Francis Gurry, deputy director-general of the
World Intellectual Property Organization. Gurry, says traditional
culture, folklore and medicines have enriched humanity. But, finding an
international solution to protecting traditional knowledge is very
complex.
"It is not like the Western tradition of someone sitting up in the bath
and saying 'Eureka I've discovered it.' There is a collective
creativity," Gurry said. "And, for that reason, it is very difficult to
know at what point the knowledge came into existence."
The intellectual property rights system awards patents and copyrights to
recognized holders of inventions, of books and recordings. This same
system is difficult to apply to traditional knowledge because the legal
holder of the right usually cannot be identified. It might be a tribe or
another traditional community.
Developing nations want a legally binding international treaty to
protect traditional knowledge. Industrialized countries oppose this.
Johnson Ole Kaunga is a Masai from Kenya. He is part of a group called
IMPACT that represents herder's rights.

He says industrialized governments benefit from exploiting genetic
resources. So, it would be against their interests to enact an
international binding instrument. He says Masai has become a worldwide
brand name. While others profit from their heritage, he says the Masai
do not.
"The Masai want to share their heritage with others. So, the most
important thing is it should not be a negative exploitation," he
explained. "It should be a shared resource for all."
Kaunga says he has little faith in national legislation because
governments often manipulate their laws against their own people.
"So, to me, an international binding legal agreement is very necessary
and important so that where governments end up abusing or forcing their
own communities to accept their national legislation or to do it
forcefully, they can now have another alternative for recourse, " he
said.
The World Intellectual Property Organization says it is in the interest
of those that use traditional knowledge to eventually strike a deal. It
says pharmaceutical companies invest billions of dollars in research.
They do not want to find themselves in a situation of legal uncertainty
when they have a successful result. This alone, it says, is reason
enough for them to reach an accord that will provide them with the legal
framework they need and, at the same time, will recompense the holders
of traditional knowledge. |