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500,000 Pregnant Women at Risk in Pakistan Floods
By Aprille Muscara
UNITED NATIONS - Aid groups and U.N. agencies are raising the alarm over the vulnerability of pregnant women and babies in flood ravaged Pakistan.
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HEALTH-UGANDA
Problems with Anti-Counterfeit Bill Persist
By Evelyn Matsamura Kiapi
KAMPALA - Health rights activists still insist that, despite some improvements to Uganda’s controversial Anti-Counterfeiting Bill, it will affect the availability of generic medicine if enacted in present form.
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HEALTH
S. Africa Becomes a Victim of its ARV Treatment Success
By Kerry Cullinan
DURBAN, South Africa - Almost a million South Africans are already on lifelong antiretroviral (ARV) treatment and this number is supposed to triple in the next decade if the South African government keeps to its implementation plan.
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HEALTH-INDIA
Superbug Boosts Hopes of Rational Drug Use
By Ranjit Devraj
NEW DELHI - Howls of protest from doctors and officials in India have followed the naming of the New Delhi Metallo-1 (NDM-1), a gene that can transform infectious bacteria into superbugs that are resistant to the most powerful antibiotics. But other experts hope that the furore on this issue may lead to a rethink on the widespread practice of using medicines indiscriminately.
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HEALTH-UGANDA
WHO Happy With Counterfeit Bill; Activists Not
By Rosebell Kagumire
KAMPALA - The Uganda office of the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the country’s National Drug Authority are satisfied that the new version of the controversial Counterfeit Goods Bill does not threaten the importation and production of generic drugs by conflating them with fake drugs, as the first draft of the bill did. But health rights activists are not convinced.
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KENYA
Claim Disputed that Trade Measures "Aid" Counterfeiters
By Suleiman Mbatiah
NAIROBI - A major pharmaceutical company in Kenya alleges that special trade measures to make medicines available in poor countries create "loopholes" for counterfeit medicines to enter the market – a claim that health rights advocates refute.
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HEALTH
Uganda Authority Finding Less Counterfeit Drugs
By Rosebell Kagumire
KAMPALA - Uganda’s National Drug Authority (NDA) says the failure rate among samples of medicines tested at their laboratories has fallen by 15 percent from the early 2000s. This serves as a possible indication of a drop in the availability of counterfeit medicines in the East African country.
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HEALTH
Kenyans’ Right to Affordable Drugs in Hands of Court
By Suleiman Mbatiah
NAIROBI - Kenya’s Constitutional Court is due to set a date on Jul 22 for a hearing on the application against the Anti-Counterfeit Act of 2008, of which clauses pertaining to medicines have been suspended pending the court’s decision on whether the law violates the right to health and life.
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HEALTH
U.S. Intensifies Anti-Counterfeit Drive in East Africa
By Wambi Michael
KAMPALA - The U.S.’s recent promotion of intellectual property (IP) rights in Uganda is an indirect way of introducing the Anti-Counterfeits Trade Agreement (ACTA) debate in East Africa.
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HEALTH
Intellectual Property Rights Remain A Barrier to Drugs
By Isolda Agazzi
GENEVA - Intellectual property (IP) rights are a key reason for high medicine prices, rendering such medicines unaffordable and therefore out of reach for poor people. While mechanisms exist to circumvent IP, poor countries have been browbeaten into adopting stringent IP laws.
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HEALTH
East African Laws Confuse Fake and Generic Drugs - WHO
By Isolda Agazzi
GENEVA - The World Health Organisation (WHO) agrees that the anti-counterfeit legislation that has been adopted or that is under consideration in East Africa threatens the accessibility of affordable generic medicines.
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HEALTH-KENYA
Agency Unaware of Anti-Counterfeit Law Suspension
By Suleiman Mbatiah
NAIROBI - The agency tasked with implementing the Anti-Counterfeit Act of 2008 in Kenya is unaware of the Constitutional Court’s suspension of the law’s application to medicines. Moreover, a large multinational pharmaceutical company has offered to assist the agency in implementing the law with regards to medicines despite the court decision.
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WORLD
"Anti-Counterfeit Deal Threatens Accessibility of Drugs"
By Adam Robert Green
LONDON - A proposed anti-counterfeit trade deal between 10 countries and the European Union (EU) could create "a new set of barriers to the export of generic medicines to low income countries".
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Bitter Pill: Obstacles to Affordable Medicine in RSSAfter years of local and global battles, cheaper generic medicines have become more available, bringing medical treatment within reach of especially poor people. But the right to access affordable medicines seems under renewed attack. Laws have been introduced in east African countries which threaten the production and distribution of generic drugs.

The inclusion of intellectual property rights in trade rules through the World Trade Organisation's Agreement on Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) in 1994 hold very real dangers. Most pertinent among these is poorer countries being prevented from serving the health care needs of their populations because of prohibitions on the production or importation of cheaper generic medicines. This has life-or-death implications for people living in the poor South, including in African states. On this page, IPS Africa publishes articles that interrogate these issues.

 
UNAIDS says Africa should produce its own generic ARVs
Provincial government in South Africa’s Western Cape Province promises to deal with shortages of crucial medicine for chronic conditions
Drug shortages in South Africa’s Western Cape Province hospitals pose a risk to patients
TLatest version of Uganda’s anti-counterfeit bill satisfies the World Health Organisation
The World Trade Organization warns against vague counterfeit drug laws in East Africa
Rosebell Kagumire reports on an apparent decline in counterfeit drugs in Uganda.
Wambi Michael hears Uganda's president assure local manufacturers that their generic medicines will not be outlawed
Brian Moonga reports on the dangers of law makers mixing  generic medicines with counterfeit drugs in Zambia.
EAC secretary general concedes dangers of anti-counterfeit policy drive, report Wambi Michael
Uganda is under pressure to change anti-counterfeit laws, reports Michael Wambi
Samantha Smit finds that many in parts of South Africa, are dying from a lack of AIDS drugs.
Wambi Michael discovers that anti-counterfeit laws could hamper access to HIV/AIDS treatment in Arusha
Wambi Michael discovers why Uganda's proposed Counterfeit Goods Bill will block access to generic medicines.
News in RSS
A BITTER PILL FROM THE DRUG INDUSTRY
  By Ignacio Ramonet
The conclusions of the final European Commission report on competition abuses in the pharmaceutical industry, released on July 8, are shocking and have wide-ranging ramifications. And yet the media have largely failed to cover it, writes Ignacio Ramonet, editor of Le Monde Diplomatique in Spanish.
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