More than 100 public interest organizations from around the world today called on officials from the countries negotiating Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) — the United States, the European Union, Switzerland, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Mexico, Australia and New Zealand — to publish immediately the draft text of the agreement.
Secrecy around the treaty negotiation has fueled concerns that its terms will undermine vital consumer interests.
Organizations signing the letter include: Consumers Union, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Essential Action, IP Justice, Knowledge Ecology International, Public Knowledge, Global Trade Watch, U.S. Public Interest Research Group, IP Left (Korea), Australian Digital Alliance, The Canadian Library Association, Consumers Union of Japan, National Consumer Council (UK) and Doctors without Borders’ Campaign for Essential Medicines.
Based on leaked documents and industry comments on the proposed treaty, the groups expressed concerns that ACTA may:
+ Require Internet Service Providers to monitor all consumers’ Internet communications;
+ Interfere with fair use of copyrighted materials;
+ Criminalize peer-to-peer electronic file sharing; and
+ Undermine access to low-cost generic medicines.
“Because the text of the treaty and relevant discussion documents remain secret, the public has no way of assessing whether and to what extent these and related concerns are merited,” say the public interest groups in their letter.
Worsening the problem is the perception that industry lobbyists have access to the text and are influencing the negotiations. “The lack of transparency in negotiations of an agreement that will affect the fundamental rights of citizens of the world is fundamentally undemocratic. It is made worse by the public perception that lobbyists from the music, film, software, video games, luxury goods and pharmaceutical industries have had ready access to the ACTA text and pre-text discussion documents through long-standing communication channels.”
“Why in the world are trade negotiators keeping the treaty a secret?” asks Robert Weissman, director of Essential Action. “Are they worried about counterfeiters influencing the negotiations? What possible rationale is there for secrecy — other than to lock out the public? Intentionally or not, a treaty to prevent unauthorized copying may easily go too far, and undermine important consumer interests. That’s why it is so important that this deal be negotiated in the light of day.”
Essential Action is a public health and corporate accountability group located in Washington, DC.
COMMENTS ON SECRECY SURROUNDING ACTA:
Kimberlee Weatherall, Lecturer, TC Beirne School of Law, The University of Queensland, and Board Member, Australian Digital Alliance
“It’s extraordinary that a treaty which potentially affects such a wide range of interests would be negotiated behind closed doors: there’s too much at stake. Secrecy is only increasing people’s fears, and the belief that the negotiations aren’t taking sufficient account of the public interest.”
Professor David Fewer, Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC), University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law
“We’re looking for the Canadian government to show leadership in introducing transparency and responsible consumer consultation to ACTA discussions.”
Professor Michael Geist, Canada Research Chair in Internet and e-commerce Law, University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law
“ACTA has raised concerns for millions of citizens around the world. The time has come to lift the veil of secrecy and ensure that the future negotiations occur in an open and transparent environment.”
Heeseob Nam, IP Left, Seoul, Korea
“ACTA is another name for “kicking away the ladder” with which the industrialised nations climbed to the top. During the debate of Patent Act of 1790, Richard Wells argued that Americans should not be deprived of the advantage of imitating any of the English invention. This argument prevailed in the U.S. House, and the importation of patents became prohibited. This policy objective was invigorated by discrimination against foreign inventors in the US, and the statute lasted for about 70 years after 1793.”
Gwen Hinze, International Policy Director, Electronic Frontier Foundation, San Francisco, CA, USA
“Despite its potentially harmful impact on consumers’ privacy and free expression, and on Internet innovation, the citizens that stand to be directly affected by ACTA’s provisions have been given almost no information about its contents. A leaked document includes new legal regimes to “encourage ISPs to cooperate with right holders”, criminal measures, and increased border search powers, all of which raise considerable concern for citizens’ civil liberties. Given the expedited timeframe in which it is being negotiated, citizens deserve to see the full text of ACTA now, so that they can evaluate its impact on their lives.”
James Love, Director, Knowledge Ecology International (KEI), Washington, DC, USA
“Counterfeiting, properly defined, is a serious problem. Why the top secret negotiating approach for this treaty? The USTR won’t even give us the agendas of the meetings or the names of the negotiators, or the proposed texts — stuff that is normally transparent. I think the answer is the bogus use of an emotive term, counterfeiting, to push an unbalanced IP enforcement agenda, without any attention to civil or consumer rights. Unfortunately, there is bipartisan support for this assault on openness and transparency. Little wonder most people don’t trust governments these days. Why should they?”
Sherwin Siy, Staff Attorney and Director of Global Knowledge Initiative, Public Knowledge, Washington, DC, USA
“It’s incredible that such a significant document on such vital issues can move forward when virtually nothing is known or shared about its actual contents. If we are going to have international agreements on matters so essential to the exchange of speech, information, and knowledge, these agreements cannot be made in secret.”
—
Dear Minister,
Re: Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement Negotiations
We are writing to urge the negotiators of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) to immediately publish the draft text of the agreement, as well as pre-draft discussion papers (especially for portions for which no draft text yet exists), before continuing further discussions over the treaty. We ask also that you publish the agenda for negotiating sessions and treaty-related meetings in advance of such meetings, and publish a list of participants in the negotiations.There is no legitimate rationale to keep the treaty text secret, and manifold reasons for immediate publication.The trade in products intended to deceive consumers as to who made them poses important but complicated public policy issues. An overbroad or poorly drafted international instrument on counterfeiting could have very harmful consequences. Based on news reports and published material from various business associations, we are deeply concerned about matters such as whether the treaty will:
+ Require Internet Service Providers to monitor all consumers’ Internet communications, terminate their customers’ Internet connections based on rights holders’ repeat allegation of copyright infringement, and divulge the identity of alleged copyright infringers possibly without judicial process, threatening Internet users’ due process and privacy rights; and potentially make ISPs liable for their end users’ alleged infringing activity;
+ Interfere with fair use of copyrighted materials;
+ Criminalize peer-to-peer file sharing;
+ Interfere with legitimate parallel trade in goods, including the resale of brand-name pharmaceutical products;
+ Impose liability on manufacturers of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), if those APIs are used to make counterfeits — a liability system that may make API manufacturers reluctant to sell to legal generic drug makers, and thereby significantly damage the functioning of the legal generic pharmaceutical industry;
+ Improperly criminalize acts not done for commercial purpose and with no public health consequences; and
+ Improperly divert public resources into enforcement of private rights.
Because the text of the treaty and relevant discussion documents remain secret, the public has no way of assessing whether and to what extent these and related concerns are merited.
Equally, because the treaty text and relevant discussion documents remain secret, treaty negotiators are denied the insights and perspectives that public interest organizations and individuals could offer. Public review of the texts and a meaningful ability to comment would, among other benefits, help prevent unanticipated pernicious problems arising from the treaty. Such unforeseen outcomes are not unlikely, given the complexity of the issues involved.
The lack of transparency in negotiations of an agreement that will affect the fundamental rights of citizens of the world is fundamentally undemocratic. It is made worse by the public perception that lobbyists from the music, film, software, video games, luxury goods and pharmaceutical industries have had ready access to the ACTA text and pre-text discussion documents through long-standing communication channels.
The G8’s recent Declaration on the World Economy implored negotiators to conclude ACTA negotiations this year. The speed of the negotiations makes it imperative that relevant text and documents be made available to the citizens of the world immediately.
We look forward to your response, and to working with you toward resolution of our concerns.
Sincerely,
Essential Action
c/o Robert Weissman, Director
P.O. Box 19405
Washington, DC, USA 20036
Tel +1 (202) 387-8030
Fax +1 (202) 234-5176
Act Up East Bay
Oakland, CA, USA
Act Up Paris
Paris, France
African Underprivileged Children’s Foundation (AUCF)
Lagos, Nigeria
AIDS Access Foundation
Thailand
AIDS Healthcare Foundation
Los Angeles, CA, USA
AIDS Treatment News
Philadelphia, PA, USA
American Medical Student Association
Reston, VA, USA
AIS Colombia
Bogotá, Colombia
ASEED Europe
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Asia Pacific Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS (APN+)
Australian Digital Alliance
Kingston, Australia
Australian National University
Canberra, Australia
Australian Privacy Foundation
Sydney, Australia
Bharatiya Krishakn Samaj
New Delhi, India
BUKO Pharma-Kampagne
Bielefeld, Germany
The Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
Toronto, Canada
The Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest
Clinic (CIPPIC)
University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law
Ottawa, Canada
The Canadian Library Association
Ottawa, Canada
The Canadian Treatment Action Council
Toronto, Canada
Center for Democracy and Technology
Washington, DC, USA
Center for Digital Democracy
Washington, DC, USA
Center for Policy Analysis on Trade and Health (CPATH)
San Francisco, CA, USA
Centre for Safety & Rational Use of Indian Systems of Medicine
Ibn Sina Academy of Medieval Medicine & Sciences
Aligarh, India
The Center for Women’s Culture & Theory
Korea
Chinese Domain Name User Alliance
Beijing, China
Christian Media Network
Korea
CHOICE (Australian Consumers Association)
Marrickville, Australia
Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project (CHAMP)
New York, NY, USA
Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU)
Cape Town, South Africa
Consumentenbond
The Hague, Netherlands
Consumer Action
San Francisco, CA, USA
Consumer Federation of America
Washington, DC, USA
Consumers Union (Publisher of Consumer Reports)
Yonkers, NY, USA
Consumers Union of Japan (Nihon Shohisha Renmei)
Tokyo, Japan
La Corporacion Opcion por el Derecho a Ser y el Deber de Hacer, NIT
Bogotá, Colombia
Corporate Europe Observatory
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Cultural Action
Korea
Diverse Women for Diversity (DWD)
New Delhi, India
Drug Study Group (DSG)
Thailand
Ecologist Collective (Colectivo ecologista Jalisco A.C.)
Guadalajara, México
Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights
Cairo, Egypt
Electronic Frontier Foundation
San Francisco, CA, USA
Electronic Frontiers Australia
Adelaide, Australia
The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
Washington, DC, USA
European AIDS Treatment Group (EATG)
Brussels, Belgium
Foreign Policy in Focus
Institute for Policy Studies
Washington, DC, USA
Foundation for Integrative AIDS Research (FIAR)
Brooklyn, NY, USA
Fundación Ifarma
Bogotá, Colombia
Foundation For Consumers (FFC)
Thailand
Foundation for Media Alternatives
Philippines
Foundation for Research in Science Technology & Ecology (RFSTE)
India
Free Press
Washington, DC, USA
FTA Watch
Thailand
Global AIDS Alliance,
Washington, DC, USA
Global Health through Education, Training & Service (GHETS)
Attleborough, MA, USA
Global Trade Watch
Washington, DC, USA
Gram Bharati Samiti Society for Rural Development
Amber, India
Gyeonggi NGO Network
Korea
Health Action International (HAI) – Africa
Nairobi, Kenya
Health Action International (HAI) – Asia Pacific
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Health Action International (HAI) – Europe
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Health Action International (HAI) – Global
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Health Action International – Latin America & Caribbean
Lima, Perú
Health GAP (Global Access Project)
Philadelphia, PA, USA
HealthWrights (Workgroup for Peoples Health and Rights)
Palo Alto, CA, USA
Healthy Skepticism Inc.
Adelaide, Australia
Home Recording Rights Coalition
Washington, DC, USA
INEGroup
Atlanta, GA, USA
Information & Culture Nuri for the Disabled
Korea
Initiative For Health Equity & Society (IHES)
New Delhi, India
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA)
The Hague, Netherlands
International Peoples Health Council (South Asia)
Intersect Worldwide
India, South Africa and USA
IP Justice
San Francisco, CA, USA
IPLeft
Seoul, Korea
Knowledge Ecology International (KEI)
Geneva, Switzerland, London, UK and Washington, DC, USA
Korean Progressive Network Jinbonet
Seoul, Korea
Labour, Health and Human Rights Development Centre
Lagos, Nigeria
Lawyers Collective HIV/AIDS Unit
India
Medsin-UK
Médecins sans Frontières (Doctors without Borders)
Campaign for Essential Medicines
Geneva, Switzerland
Media Access Project
Washington, DC, USA
La Mesa de ONGs Con Trabajo en VIH/SIDA
Bogotá, Colombia
Misión Salud
Bogotá, Colombia
National Consumer Council (NCC)
London, UK
National Working Group on Patent Laws
New Delhi, India
Navdanya
New Delhi, India
Netzwerk Freies Wissen
Berlin, Germany
Open Rights Group
UK
Paradise Hospital
Port Moresby, Papau New Guinea
People’s Coalition for Media Reform
Seoul, Korea
Phasuma Consultancy & Training
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Positive Malaysian Treatment Access & Advocacy Group (MTAAG+).
Malaysia
Privacy Activism
USA
Privacy Rights Clearinghouse
San Diego, CA, USA
Public Knowledge
Washington, DC, USA
Rural Reconstruction Nepal (RRN)
Kathmandu, Nepal
Social movement to combat private media ownership and enhance public media
Korea
Student Global AIDS Campaign
USA
Swisslinux.org
Mayens-de-Chamoson, Switzerland
The Transparency and Accountability Network
New York, NY, USA
Third World Network
Malaysia
Universities Allied for Essential Medicines (UAEM)
UK, USA
U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG)
Washington, DC, USA
Women & Health ! (WAH ! )
India
**Individuals**
Jamie Acosta, PhD, LCSW, CHES
Miami, FL, USA
Mr. Jose L. Aguilar
Justice and Peace Commission
Mexico City, Mexico
Beate Amler
Trade Union Researcher
Berlin, Germany
Professor Brook K. Baker
Northeastern University School of Law
Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy
Boston, MA, USA
Gladys Baldew
Public Health Consultant
Netherlands
Laurel Baldwin-Ragaven, MD
Asylum Hill Family Practice Center
Hartford, CT, USA
Murtala Bello
Pharmacist, Ministry of Health
Sokoto, Nigeria
Jennifer Bruenger
Reference Librarian & Education Program Coordinator
Linda Hall Library of Science, Engineering & Technology
Mission, KS, USA
Erin Burns
Former National Organizer, Student Global AIDS Campaign (SGAC)
Jacksonville, FL, USA
Sylvia Caras, PhD
Santa Cruz, CA, USA
Ramon Certeza
Director for Education, Research and Industrial Relations
Confederation of Labor and Allied Social Services (CLASS)
Manila, Philippines
Sae-Rom Chae
University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine
Chicago, IL, USA
Jeff Chester
Executive Director
Center for Digital Democracy
Washington, DC, USA
Don Christie
President
New Zealand Open Source Society
Mark R. Costa
Clay, NY, USA
Chris Curry
MD/PhD Candidate
Loyola University Chicago
Forest Park, IL, USA
Dr Gopal Dabade
President,
Drug Action Forum – Karnataka
Dharwad, India
Anke Dahrendorf, LLM
Junior Researcher, International and European Law
University of Maastricht, The Netherlands
Daniel de Beer, PhD
Lecturer in Law
Université Saint Louis
Brussels, Belgium
Dr. Gilles de Wildt
Jiggins Lane Medical Centre
Birmingham, UK
John Dillon
Program Coordinator
KAIROS: Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives
Toronto, Canada
Dr. David Egilman, MD, MPH
Clinical Associate Professor
Brown University
Attleboro, MA, USA
Professor Peter Evans
Department of Sociology
University of California, Berkeley, USA
Thomas Alured Faunce
Assoc. Professor, College of Law
Assoc. Professor, Medical School, College of Medicine and Health Sciences
Australian National University
Canberra, Australia
Professor Brian Fitzgerald
Professor of Intellectual Property and Innovation
Law Faculty
Queensland University of Technology
Brisbane, Australia
Professor Sean Flynn
Associate Director
Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property
American University Washington College of Law
Washington DC, USA
Maurice J. Freedman
Past President, American Library Association
Mount Kisco, NY, USA
Michael Geist
Canada Research Chair in Internet and e-commerce Law
University of Ottawa, Canada
Jonathan Walter Giehl
Ocala, Florida, USA
Johnny Jesus Guaylupo
PLWHA
Brooklyn, NY, USA
Dr. Chandra M. Gulhati
Editor, Monthly Index of Medical Specialities (MIMS)
New Delhi, India
Mark W. Heffington, MD
Cashiers, NC, USA
Matthew Herder
Visiting Professor of Law
Loyola University Chicago
Chicago, IL, USA
Maggie Huff-Rousselle
Chair, Pharmaceuticals Interest Working Group
American Public Health Association
Boston, MA, USA
Doug Ireland,
Journalist
New York, NY, USA
Professor S. Jayasundar, PhD
Pharmacology
Chennai, India
Dr. K.R. John
Dept. of Community Health
Christian Medical College
Vellore, India
Puja Kapai
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Law
The University of Hong Kong
Alison Katz
People’s Health Movement and Centre Europe Tiers Monde
Geneva, Switzerland
Niyada Kiatying-Angsulee, Ph.D.
Chair, Social Pharmacy Research Unit (SPR)
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Chulalongkorn University
Bangkok, Thailand
Professor Heinz Klug
University of Wisconsin Law School
Madison, WI, USA
Senior Honorary Research Associate, University of the Witwatersrand
Johannesburg, South Africa
Adam M. Kost
University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine
Chicago, IL, USA
Professor Joel Lexchin, MD
York University
Toronto, Canada
Jiraporn Limpananont, PhD
Social Pharmacy Research Unit
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Chulalongkorn University
Bangkok, Thailand
Nicholas J. Lusiani
International Network for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
ESCR-Net / Red-DESC / Réseau-DESC
New York, NY, USA
Hamish MacEwan
Open ICT Consultant
Wellington, New Zealand
Dr. Duncan Matthews
Reader in Intellectual Property Law
School of Law
Queen Mary, University of London
United Kingdom
Eduardo Mayorga
ALAFAR (Ecuadorian Generic Pharmaceutical Association)
Quito, Ecuador
Dr. Jeni McAughey
Whitehead, Northern Ireland
Prof. David Menkes
Waikato Clinical School
University of Auckland
Hamilton, New Zealand
Mr. T. Mikindo, B.Pharms, MSc
Pharmacist
Ifakara Health Institute
Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
Adrienne Mishkin
Tulane University School of Medicine and School of Public Health and
Tropical Medicine MD/MPH candidate, Class of 2009
New Orleans, LA, USA
Isameldin M.A. Mustafa, B.Pharm
The Director of Pharmaceutical Services Department
National Health Insurance Fund
Khartoum, Sudan
Ibraheem Naeem
Medical student
Lahore, Pakistan
Dr. Pat Neuwelt
Public Health Physician and Professor
Mt. Albert, Auckland, New Zealand
Ahti Otala
Espoo, Finland
Frank Ottey
Media, PA, USA
Kevin Outterson
Associate Professor of Law & Director of the Health Law Program
Boston University School of Law
Boston, MA, USA
Dr. Carol Parlow
Oakville, Canada
Dr. Peter Parry
Consultant Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist
Senior Lecturer, Flinders University
Oaklands Pk, Australia
Ngufor Forkum Polycarp, BA, MEd, MA, DEA, Dip-ENSP, LLM
Human Rights Training Unit
Police Training School
Yaounde, Cameroon
Joana Ramos, MSW
Cancer Resources & Advocacy
Seattle, WA, USA
Nicolas Rasmussen, MPhil, PhD, MPH
Associate Professor
National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre
University of New South Wales
Sydney, Australia
Dr. Amitrajit Saha
New Delhi, India
A. Sankar
Executive Director
EMPOWER
Tuticorin, India
Dr. Canan Sargin, MD
UNICEF
Ankara, Turkey
Dr. Gordon Schiff
Associate Director, Center for Patient Safety Research and Practice
Division of General Internal Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital
Boston, MA, USA
Claudio Schuftan, MD
People’s Health Movement Vietnam
Professor Susan K. Sell
George Washington University
Washington, DC USA
Melissa Serrano
Researcher
University of the Phillippines
Manila, Philippines
Aaron Shaw
Berkman Center for Internet and Society
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Dr. Mira Shiva, MD
Coordinator, Initiative for Health, Equity and Society
Founding Member, People’s Health Movement
New Delhi, India
Dr. Vandana Shiva
Navdanya
New Delhi, India
Beverley Snell
Essential Medicines and Community Health Specialist
Centre for International Health
Macfarlane Burnet Institute for Medical Research and Public Health
Melbourne, Australia
Wilma Teran
Pharmaceutical Biochemist, Public Health
Platform on Access to Medicines and Intellectual Property
La Paz, Bolivia
Clinton Henry Trout, MPH
Candidate for Doctor of Public Health
Boston University
Boston, MA, USA
Karolina Tuomisto
Medical Student
Helsinki, Finland
Mike Waghorne
Retired
Former Assistant General Secretary
Public Services International
Esquibien, France
Richard Walther
Alexandria, Virginia, USA
Professor Kimberlee Weatherall
TC Beirne School of Law
The University of Queensland
Brisbane, Australia
Patricia Whelehan, PhD
Professor, Anthropology
State University of New York-Potsdam
Potsdam, NY, USA
Edlira Xhafa
Researcher
Education International
Nyon, Switzerland
Julie M. Zito, PhD
Professor, Pharmacoepidemiology
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Baltimore, MD, USA
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OPENNESS IN TRADE AND OTHER MULTILATERAL NEGOTIATIONS
Negotiating texts are commonly made public in multilateral trade negotiation, although some trade negotiations are characterized by secrecy.
Examples of negotiations where texts are or were made public include:
The current Doha Round negotiations at the World Trade Organization;
http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/dda_e/dda_e.htm
The Free Trade Area of the Americas;
http://www.ftaa-alca.org/FTAADraft03/Index_e.asp
The Multilateral Agreement on Investment (although initial texts were not made public)
http://www.oecd.org/document/35/0,3343,en_2649_33783766_1894819_1_1_1_1,00.html
Draft text at the World Health Organization, where resolutions are published in advance of consideration and treaty or treaty-like negotiations are handled openly, including this example of follow-on negotiations for the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control:
http://www.who.int/gb/fctc/
The World Intellectual Property Organization, including this example of a draft Treaty on the Protection of Broadcasting Organizations:
http://www.wipo.int/meetings/en/doc_details.jsp?doc_id=57213
The list of signers and additional quotes from groups signing the letter is available on the continuatio of this post, or as downloadable rtf at: