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TWN Info Service on Intellectual Property Issues (Feb07/07) 14 February 2007
Developing countries fear that sharing information about local samples of bird flu virus benefit the developed countries more from the vaccines produced. The article below describes their concern that the benefits are not equally shared despite supplying the virus samples and is reproduced with the permission of South-North Development Monitor (SUNS) #6188, 12 February 2007. With
best wishes HEALTH: WHO FEATHERS RUFFLED OVER BIRD FLU VACCINE By
Marwaan Macan-Markar, A decision by the Indonesian government to be selective about sending local samples of the bird flu virus to the World Health Organisation (WHO) reflects fears harboured by developing countries of being marginalised in the race to find a vaccine for this deadly disease. This route towards a vaccine is expected to rattle the prevailing global system to identify strains of flu for developing new vaccines. It was a system designed by the Geneva-based health agency with the backing of its 193 members and had been sustained through a spirit of cooperation. '' But the reality is otherwise, they add, because developed countries gain more from the vaccines produced from virus samples collected from the developing world. '' ''The WHO should address this new challenge from a global security point of view.'' Signs of such thinking among developing countries have emerged in the past months, most noticeably at a WHO meeting in January. On that occasion, representatives of developing nations expressed concern that their people are seeing only limited benefits from the current arrangement to develop vaccines, despite supplying the virus samples. Late
last year, Chinese authorities limited the amount of bird flu virus
samples they were prepared to share with the WHO, leading to a clash
between Other
South-east Asian countries like So
far, 160 people have died out of the total 270 cases of infection stemming
from contact with poultry infected by the H5N1 strain of the virus.
Human cases have been recorded in 11 countries out of the more than
50 nations across Asia, Africa and The latest outbreak of bird flu, which began in the winter of 2003 in South-east Asia and has kept reappearing in an unpredictable manner, also triggered concern by developing countries in 2005 when there was a race to purchase limited stocks of Tamiflu. This drug was identified at the time as being the only one potent enough to respond to the spread of avian influenza. Developed
countries like the ''The US and Western countries are gobbling up the drug and denying access to developing countries that need it most,'' Philippines' health secretary, Francois Duque, said in protest at the time. ''The poor countries once again have been excluded from the arena.'' The floods, which followed heavy rains, submerged close to 80% of Jakarta's 44 districts, with some places going under three metres of water. The floods killed more than 30 people and forced 340,000 from their homes.
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