Saturday, November 20, 2004

Moral values - faith informs progressive positions too -

                         WITNESS FOR JUSTICE #0190

                             November 15, 2004

                              ON MORAL VALUES
                                                  By Bernice Powell Jackson
(Executive Minister for Justice and Witness Ministries of the United Church of Christ)

      Some of us who consider ourselves to be liberals or progressives have
been  just  too  quiet  in  the conversation about moral values.  Some have
argued  that  those  who  live  in the so-called "blue states," those which
voted  for  John Kerry, haven't even been aware of the conversation or have
been, at best, uneasy in it.  Thus, they say, not only did  John Kerry seem
hesitant  to  talk  about his own faith and how it informs his life and his
decision-making  process,  but  so,  too,  did  Howard  Dean  and even John
Edwards, a Southerner.

      I  happen to agree with them. We need to talk about moral values and
we must talk about how our faith informs who we are and what we say and do.
I  believe  that  those  of  us who are Christians must take back Jesus and
those of us who are people of faith must take back our ability to frame our
positions on critical social issues in the context of our faith.

      The Jesus I am talking about is the one who turned over the tables of
the  moneychangers  right  inside the temple.  The Jesus I am talking about
said  at  the beginning of his ministry, "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me
because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor."  The Jesus I am
talking about said "Blessed are the peacemakers for they will be called the
children  of  God."   The Jesus I am talking about said, "You have heard it
said  you  shall  love your neighbor and hate your enemy.  But I say to you
love  your  enemies  and pray for those who persecute you."  The Jesus I am
talking  about  said, "Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first
to throw a stone at her."  The Jesus I am talking about never said one word
about  homosexuality.   The  Jesus I am talking about ate with the sinners,
the  outcasts  and  the  tax collectors.  He drew to himself those who were
marginalized  by  those in the faith: the women, the children, the lepers,
the unclean.

      This  Jesus that I know and follow challenged the Roman empire in its
oppression  of  the poor, in its war against the Jews and he challenged the
Pharisees  and scribes in the temples for their fastidious following of the
law  at  the  expense  of  healing and justice for the people.  This is the
Jesus  we  must  reclaim  and proclaim in this conversation about faith and
values.

      It  is  this  Jesus  and  the God who requires us to do justice, love
kindness, and walk humbly with our God who informs my positions on tax cuts
for  the  wealthy  in  a  nation  where one in every five children lives in
poverty.   It  is this God who makes me ask what is wrong with us when tens
of thousands of people die every day from starvation and the United Nations
estimates  that  $13  billion allocated above current spending levels would
mean  that  every  one  in the world (including Americans) would have basic
food  and  health care.  At the same time Americans and Europeans spend $17
billion on food for their pets every year.  It is this God, who created the
earth and all that is in it who informs my position on our unwillingness to
sign the Kyoto protocol or to even admit that there is global warming while
we in the U.S., who are 5% of the world's population use 25% of the world's
fuel  and  provide  at  least  four  or five times our share of the earth's
pollution.

      I  do  want  to  talk  about moral values.   I want to talk about the
moral  values  of  a  pre-emptive strike war which we now know was based on
half-truths  at best and lies at worst.  I want to talk about the more than
1,000  Americans  who  have been killed in that war and the 10,000 who have
come  back  home  injured  and  the  tens of thousands who will return with
significant  mental conditions.  I want to talk about the tens of thousands
of  Iraqi  women  and children, civilians all, who have been killed since
the beginning of this war.

      I do want to talk about integrity and truth and honesty and fairness.
I do want to talk about democracy and freedom and justice for all.

      Moral values is about so much more than the right of a woman to
choose and the rights of gay and lesbian Americans.  It's about how we live
life together in the 21st century, understanding that as Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. said, "The moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends
towards justice."

Wednesday, November 10, 2004

Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI)

Peaceful Ends through Peaceful Means:

A Christian Witness for Peace in Israel and Palestine

Peaceful Ends Through Peaceful Means

 

"One day we must come to see that peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek but a means by which we arrive at that goal. We must pursue peaceful ends through peaceful means."

 -- Martin Luther King, Jr.            



October 29, 2004                                 
                                                                                                 
US Ecumenical Accompanier Serving in Ramallah                                                                                                                                                       
The 9th group of Ecumenical Accompaniers is now on the ground working with local partners throughout the Palestinian

Territories and Israel. One US Accompanier is currently serving in the World Council of Churches Ecumenical

Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI) with the support of Peaceful Ends through Peaceful Means (PEPM).                                     
                                                                                       
Anne is assigned to Ramallah, a town north of Jerusalem, where she works with the Hope Lutheran Church and other

programs in the community and neighboring villages. She is from New York and is an active member of the Evangelical

Lutheran Church in America. She is one of an international group of 29 Accompaniers working with Palestinians and

Israelis to build a just and secure peace for Israel and Palestine. You can read first-hand stories from the Accompaniers

on the EAPPI website at http://www.eappi.org/.                          
                                                                                                 
This three-month group of the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme, which began sending volunteers in August 2002,

will conclude in December. Anne will then join other returned US Ecumenical Accompaniers who are sharing about their

experiences in churches and communities nationwide.    
                                                                                                                                                                                                  
Peaceful Ends through Peaceful Means serves as the coordinator for the EAPPI in the US and is a coalition related to

Church World Service. For more information about the program or returned Accompaniers in your area, or to support

US participation in the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme, please visit the PEPM website: Http://www.pepm.org.    


The Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI) was launched in August 2002.

Ecumenical Accompaniers monitor and report violations of human rights and international humanitarian law,

support acts of nonviolent resistance alongside local Christian and Muslim Palestinians and Israeli peace activists,

offer protection through nonviolent presence, engage in public policy advocacy, and stand in solidarity with the

Churches and all those struggling against the Occupation. The programme is coordinated by the World Council of Churches (WCC).

 

The WCC is a fellowship of 342 Churches, in more than 100 countries in all continents from virtually all Christian traditions. The

Roman Catholic Church is not a member Church but works cooperatively with the WCC. Its office is in Geneva, Switzerland.

Fair Trade coffee judged also best bean!


Trade Secrets
Equal Exchange's fair-trade coffee isn't just virtuous. Because of the company's innovative and collaborative ways of dealing with growers, it gets better beans. That makes for a darn good cup o' joe -- and caffeinated growth for Equal Exchange. Do companies that thrive by twisting their suppliers' arms have something to learn?
From: Issue 88 November 2004, Page 98
By: Lucas Conley
Illustrations by: Greg Morgan
URL: http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/88/trade-secrets.html

When Mike Gallagher took over Java Monkey in Decatur, Georgia, three years ago, he admits he didn't know much about coffee shops. But as the owner of a successful local pub, he was sure of two things: He knew how to run a profitable business, and he knew a mean espresso when he tasted one. His first step was to dump Java Monkey's coffee supplier, Seattle's Best, and head out in search of a better bean. After requesting samples from nearly two dozen different labels, he dismissed all but five, and invited the contenders to a showdown in Georgia. The winner? Equal Exchange, a small company whose coffee beans are all "fair trade."
At first glance, that might seem like an odd choice. After all, there's a fundamentally uneconomical -- or at least extra-economical -- aura to fair trade. In the interest of "fairness," first-world companies voluntarily pay third-world farmers more than twice the market price for a crop like coffee and then pass on much of the higher price to cafes, grocery stores, and individual customers. The extra money consumers are willing to pony up out of a sense of social conscience helps raise living standards and build clinics, schools, and roads in impoverished regions.
Or so the theory goes. But at Equal Exchange, fair trade isn't just about good intentions. Besides paying farmers more, Equal Exchange works with them to help them grow and process better beans. The result is a tastier product that commands a higher price on its merits, not just its meritoriousness. It's a refreshing exception to the hard-nosed, Wal-Martesque way many companies treat their suppliers these days: Instead of dropping vendors for the slightest infraction, or pressuring them to offer lower and lower prices, Equal Exchange forges closer, more-forgiving relationships with its farmers in the interest of providing better products. Customers love it. Farmers love it. And Equal Exchange's competitors are catching on.
Of course, coffee isn't bicycle tires or masking tape. Thanks to the $4 latte, java has become a premium product that can command a premium price, and that opens a window for fair traders such as Equal Exchange, which often matches or beats the prices of non-fair-trade rivals. And it's no longer a fringe business. Americans drank $9 billion in gourmet coffee last year -- amounting to 535 million pounds of beans -- nearly 20% of the U.S. coffee market, according to the Specialty Coffee Association of America and TransFair USA, the governing body that certifies fair-trade companies in the United States. Sales at Equal Exchange have grown at an average of 30% a year. This year, the company expects to top $15.5 million -- more than 4 million pounds of coffee, up from 25,000 in 1986. And growth like Equal Exchange's can come only from providing good coffee. "The product can carry the message but not the other way around," says sales rep Meghan Hubbs. "People may try your coffee on the basis of the social message, but they won't keep coming back if it's no good."
The goodness of Equal Exchange's coffee rests in the hands of Beth Ann Caspersen, the company's quality-control guru. In Caspersen's cupping lab, newly imported beans are put through a barrage of tests that examine everything from humidity to color, shape, and size. And, of course, there's the taste. "Coffee is a lot like wine," she says. "There's a real art and skill in handling the beans." Caspersen is quick to point out that not all fair-trade coffee is perfect: Some 10% to 15% of the coffee she samples in her lab is rejected. "We're brothers and sisters," she says, "but we're doing business here."
Those rejection rates used to be much higher, but the company has brought them down by working directly with farmers. In August, for example, six Nicaraguan farmers spent a week at the company's Canton, Massachusetts, headquarters, learning "flavor profiles" under Caspersen's tutelage. Each month, she or other Equal Exchange employees will visit some of the company's 19 farmer co-ops, often bringing along customers and cafe owners. (Each new employee is required to make a trip to a farmer co-op within his or her first 30 months at the company.) As shipments reach Canton, Caspersen writes out detailed reports in Spanish and emails them to co-op managers. "With this feedback," she says, "farmers are able to provide a better bean."
One such farmer is Arnaldo Neyra Camizan, 47, the general manager of a small 200-farmer co-op in northern Peru. In most countries, independent farmers must often settle for a 30-cent-per-pound "farm-gate price." Camizan sells his beans to Equal Exchange for $1.41 (TransFair sets the rate). With the proceeds, co-op farmers such as Camizan are not only able to improve their communities and feed their families but also can buy better seeds, fertilize their next crop, and build infrastructure such as mills, cupping labs, and optic sorters that check beans before export. Such improvements allow them to sell the beans directly to Equal Exchange at full price, rather than outsourcing to a middleman with a roaster or mill. On grocery shelves in the United States, Camizan's beans, marketed by Equal Exchange under names such as "Organic Mind, Body and Soul," fetch $8.49 a pound (less than some major labels). "Through Equal Exchange's help," says Camizan, "our members are converting from small-scale farmers to small-scale businesspeople."
Equal Exchange also offers preharvest loans so farmers don't have to trade against their crops during the season. Last year, director of purchasing Todd Caspersen lent $1 million to farmer co-ops. He says it's not charity, it's competitive thinking. With fair-trade prices set by TransFair, everyone's paying the same price. So who gets the good stuff? "Well," he shrugs, "if you happen to have a quarter-million-dollar loan out to them, you will." Equal Exchange helps its farmers ride out problems too. A few years back, for example, Beth Ann Caspersen sensed a decline in quality from one of its co-ops. Instead of dropping the co-op altogether, she sent a message by cutting the contract 20%. The co-op improved its sorting and processing, and today Equal Exchange imports more of its coffee than ever before.
Competitors have been taking note. Since 1999, Green Mountain, Starbucks, and Procter & Gamble have all dipped their toes in the fair-trade market. Green Mountain does nearly 20% fair trade, the most of the three. This spring, Dunkin' Donuts introduced 100% fair-trade espresso beans. In response to its new competitors, Equal Exchange has offered the same goodwill it extends to its farmer co-ops, promoting their efforts and urging them to do more. When P&G entered the fair-trade market, Equal Exchange challenged its new rival to match its own yearly volume. It's altruistic, but it's also self-interested. Equal Exchange figures its rivals will expand the market for fair-trade coffee.
In the end, the proof is in the cup. Back at Java Monkey, Equal Exchange's largest cafe client, Gallagher says fair trade wasn't the deciding factor in his decision to carry Equal Exchange; Decatur is far from liberal stomping grounds like Berkeley or Ann Arbor, where fair trade is a natural fit. While Gallagher says the mission behind fair trade is important to him personally -- he even joined Equal Exchange for a 12-day trip to Nicaragua a couple of years back -- to the customer, the coffee is usually all that matters. "More than half of our clientele have no idea they're drinking fair-trade coffee," says Gallagher. "For them, it's just about quality."
Lucas Conley is a Fast Company staff writer.


Copyright © 2004 Gruner + Jahr USA Publishing. All rights reserved.
Fast Company, 375 Lexington Avenue.,New York , NY 10017

Patents, intellectual Property & AIDS drugs

Africa: Intellectual Property

AfricaFocus Bulletin
Nov 7, 2004 (041107)
(Reposted from sources cited below)

Editor's Note

"Humanity stands at a crossroads - a fork in our moral code and a
test of our ability to adapt and grow. Will we evaluate, learn and
profit from ...new ideas and opportunities [to share knowledge], or will we respond to the most unimaginative pleas to suppress all of this in favor of intellectually weak, ideologically rigid, and sometimes brutally unfair and inefficient policies [on intellectual property]? - Geneva Declaration on the Future of the World Intellectual Property Organization

Despite continued U.S. refusal to allow the use of cost-effective
generic drugs in its international AIDS programs (see http://www.africafocus.org/docs04/acc0411.php)> Africa Focus , there is momentum
on other fronts in the international campaign to give priority to
health and development needs over narrow interpretations of patent
rights. The European Commission on October 29 proposed a new
regulation to allow generic drug manufacturers to produce patented
medicines for exports. Earlier in October, the World Intellectual
Property Organization (WIPO) adopted a proposal by developing
countries to fully integrate development priorities into its
consideration of intellectual property issues.

WIPO, though much less prominent than the powerful World Trade
Organization (WTO), is the official UN agency with responsibilities
including technical assistance to countries on intellectual
property rights, including patents, copyrights, and other related
issues. In recent years experts, non-governmental organizations,
and developing countries have lobbied actively for a more proactive
role for WIPO, noting that "humanity faces a global crisis in the
governance of knowledge, technology and culture." In response the
WIPO assembly on October 4 approved a proposal for a "development
agenda" presented by Brazil, Argentina, and other developing
countries.

This AfricaFocus Bulletin presents the unofficial Geneva
Declaration and excerpts from the developing country proposal on
this issue. These documents, as well as much additional background
information and copies of the Geneva Declaration in French,
Spanish, and other languages, are available at http://www.cptech.org/ip/wipo/genevadeclaration.html> other languages

On the topic of access to medicines in particular, the Health
Systems Resource Centre of the British Government's Department for
International Development has just released several new papers
warning of implications of new developments in intellectual
property and trade laws. In particular, a paper on "Access to
Medicines in Under-served Markets" calls spells out the new
difficulties that will arise next year for production of new
generic drugs when tighter patent rules come into effect in India
and China. See http://www.dfidhealthrc.org/shared/know_the/publications.html> Health for
this and other related publications.

++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++

Geneva Declaration on the Future of the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO)

Humanity faces a global crisis in the governance of knowledge,
technology and culture. The crisis is manifest in many ways.

* Without access to essential medicines, millions suffer and die;

* Morally repugnant inequality of access to education, knowledge
and technology undermines development and social cohesion;

* Anticompetitive practices in the knowledge economy impose
enormous costs on consumers and retard innovation;

* Authors, artists and inventors face mounting barriers to
follow-on innovation;

* Concentrated ownership and control of knowledge, technology,
biological resources and culture harm development, diversity and
democratic institutions;

* Technological measures designed to enforce intellectual property
rights in digital environments threaten core exceptions in
copyright laws for disabled persons, libraries, educators, authors
and consumers, and undermine privacy and freedom;

* Key mechanisms to compensate and support creative individuals and
communities are unfair to both creative persons and consumers;

* Private interests misappropriate social and public goods, and
lock up the public domain.

At the same time, there are astoundingly promising innovations in
information, medical and other essential technologies, as well as
in social movements and business models. We are witnessing highly
successful campaigns for access to drugs for AIDS, scientific
journals, genomic information and other databases, and hundreds of
innovative collaborative efforts to create public goods, including
the Internet, the World Wide Web, Wikipedia, the Creative Commons,
GNU Linux and other free and open software projects, as well as
distance education tools and medical research tools. Technologies
such as Google now provide tens of millions with powerful tools to
find information. Alternative compensation systems have been
proposed to expand access and interest in cultural works, while
providing both artists and consumers with efficient and fair
systems for compensation. There is renewed interest in compensatory
liability rules, innovation prizes, or competitive intermediators,
as models for economic incentives for science and technology that
can facilitate sequential follow-on innovation and avoid monopolist
abuses. In 2001, the World Trade Organization (WTO) declared that
member countries should "promote access to medicines for all."

Humanity stands at a crossroads - a fork in our moral code and a
test of our ability to adapt and grow. Will we evaluate, learn and
profit from the best of these new ideas and opportunities, or will
we respond to the most unimaginative pleas to suppress all of this
in favor of intellectually weak, ideologically rigid, and sometimes
brutally unfair and inefficient policies? Much will depend upon the
future direction of the World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO), a global body setting standards that regulate the
production, distribution and use of knowledge.

A 1967 Convention sought to encourage creative activity by
establishing WIPO to promote the protection of intellectual
property. The mission was expanded in 1974, when WIPO became part
of the United Nations, under an agreement that asked WIPO to take
"appropriate action to promote creative intellectual activity," and
facilitate the transfer of technology to developing countries, "in
order to accelerate economic, social and cultural development."

As an intergovernmental organization, however, WIPO embraced a
culture of creating and expanding monopoly privileges, often
without regard to consequences. The continuous expansion of these
privileges and their enforcement mechanisms has led to grave social
and economic costs, and has hampered and threatened other important
systems of creativity and innovation. WIPO needs to enable its
members to understand the real economic and social consequences of
excessive intellectual property protections, and the importance of
striking a balance between the public domain and competition on the
one hand, and the realm of property rights on the other. The
mantras that "more is better" or "that less is never good" are
disingenuous and dangerous -- and have greatly compromised the
standing of WIPO, especially among experts in intellectual property
policy. WIPO must change.

We do not ask that WIPO abandon efforts to promote the appropriate
protection of intellectual property, or abandon all efforts to
harmonize or improve these laws. But we insist that WIPO work from
the broader framework described in the 1974 agreement with the UN,
and take a more balanced and realistic view of the social benefits
and costs of intellectual property rights as a tool, but not the
only tool, for supporting creativily intellectual activity.

WIPO must also express a more balanced view of the relative
benefits of harmonization and diversity, and seek to impose global
conformity only when it truly benefits all of humanity. A "one size
fits all" approach that embraces the highest levels of intellectual
property protection for everyone leads to unjust and burdensome
outcomes for countries that are struggling to meet the most basic
needs of their citizens.

The WIPO General Assembly has now been asked to establish a
development agenda. The initial proposal, first put forth by the
governments of Argentina and Brazil, would profoundly refashion the
WIPO agenda toward development and new approaches to support
innovation and creativity. This is a long overdue and much needed
first step toward a new WIPO mission and work program. It is not
perfect. The WIPO Convention should formally recognize the need to
take into account the "development needs of its Member States,
particularly developing countries and least-developed countries,"
as has been proposed, but this does not go far enough. Some have
argued that the WIPO should only "promote the protection of
intellectual property," and not consider, any policies that roll
back intellectual property claims or protect and enhance the public
domain. This limiting view stifles critical thinking. Better
expressions of the mission can be found, including the requirement
in the 1974 UN/WIPO agreement that WIPO "promote creative
intellectual activity and facilitate the transfer of technology
related to industrial property." The functions of WIPO should not
only be to promote "efficient protection" and "harmonization" of
intellectual property laws, but to formally embrace the notions of
balance, appropriateness and the stimulation of both competitive
and collaborative models of creative activity within national,
regional and transnational systems of innovation.

The proposal for a development agenda has created the first real
opportunity to debate the future of WIPO. It is not only an agenda
for developing countries. It is an agenda for everyone, North and
South. It must move forward. All nations and people must join and
expand the debate on the future of WIPO.

There must be a moratorium on new treaties and harmonization of
standards that expand and strengthen monopolies and further
restrict access to knowledge. For generations WIPO has responded
primarily to the narrow concerns of powerful publishers,
pharmaceutical manufacturers, plant breeders and other commercial
interests. Recently, WIPO has become more open to civil society and
public interest groups, and this openness is welcome. But WIPO must
now address the substantive concerns of these groups, such as the
protection of consumer rights and human rights. Long-neglected
concerns of the poor, the sick, the visually impaired and others
must be given priority.

The proposed development agenda points in the right direction. By
stopping efforts to adopt new treaties on substantive patent law,
broadcasters rights and databases, WIPO will create space to
address far more urgent needs.

The proposals for the creation of standing committees and working
groups on technology transfer and development are welcome. WIPO
should also consider the creation of one or more bodies to
systematically address the control of anticompetitive practices and
the protection of consumer rights.

We support the call for a Treaty on Access to Knowledge and
Technology. The Standing Committee on Patents and the Standing
Committee on Copyright and Related Rights should solicit views from
member countries and the public on elements of such a treaty.

The WIPO technical assistance programs must be fundamentally
reformed. Developing countries must have the tools to implement the
WTO Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health, and "use, to the
full" the flexibilities in the TRIPS to "promote access to
medicines for all." WIPO must help developing countries address the
limitations and exceptions in patent and copyright laws that are
essential for fairness, development and innovation. If the WIPO
Secretariat cannot understand the concerns and represent the
interests of the poor, the entire technical assistance program
should be moved to an independent body that is accountable to
developing countries.

Enormous differences in bargaining power lead to unfair outcomes
between creative individuals and communities (both modern and
traditional) and the commercial entities that sell culture and
knowledge goods. WIPO must honor and support creative individuals
and communities by investigating the nature of relevant unfair
business practices, and promote best practice models and reforms
that protect creative individuals and communities in these
situations, consistent with norms of the relevant communities.

Delegations representing the WIPO member states and the WIPO
Secretariat have been asked to choose a future. We want a change of
direction, new priorities, and better outcomes for humanity. We
cannot wait for another generation. It is time to seize the moment
and move forward.

*************************************************************

Developing Countries' Proposal for Establishing a Development
Agenda for WIPO

See more at Third World Network

TWN Info Service on WTO and Trade Issues (Oct04/3)

4 October 2004

A major development of potentially great significance took place at
the General Assembly of the World Intellectual Property
Organisation (WIPO), held in Geneva on 27 September to 5 October
2004: the presentation of a proposal by several developing
countries to establish a "Development Agenda" for WIPO.

The proposal (which has the document number WO/GA/31/11, dated
August 27 2004) was originally submitted by Argentina and Brazil.
It was co-sponsored by Bolivia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador,
Iran, Kenya, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania and Venezuela. On
4 October, Egypt announced it was also joining as a co-sponsor.

The proposal was discussed extensively by the Assembly in formal
and informal sessions on 30 September, 1 and 2 October and a
decision welcoming it was adopted by the WIPO General Assembly on
4 October.

______________________________

Proposal by Argentina and Brazil for the Establishment of a
Development Agenda for the World Intellectual Property Organization

[excerpts: for full text see http://www.cptech.org/ip/wipo/genevadeclaration.html]> Argentina & Brazil

Submitted to the 40th Series of Meetings of the Assemblies of the
Member States of WIPO and to the 31st Session of the WIPO General
Assembly

27 September -5 October 2004

...

II - the Development Dimension and Intellectual Property Protection

Technological innovation, science and creative activity in general
are rightly recognized as important sources of material progress
and welfare. However, despite the important scientific and
technological advances and promises of the 20th and early 21st
centuries in many areas, a significant "knowledge gap", as well as
a "digital divide", continue to separate the wealthy nations from
the poor.

In this context, the impact of intellectual property has been
widely debated in past years. Intellectual property protection is
intended as an instrument to promote technological innovation, as
well as the transfer and dissemination of technology. Intellectual
property protection cannot be seen as an end in itself, nor can the
harmonization of intellectual property laws leading to higher
protection standards in all countries, irrespective of their levels
of development.

The role of intellectual property and its impact on development
must be carefully assessed on a case-by-case basis. IP protection
is a policy instrument the operation of which may, in actual
practice, produce benefits as well as costs, which may vary in
accordance with a country's level of development. Action is
therefore needed to ensure, in all countries, that the costs do not
outweigh the benefits of IP protection.

In this regard, the adoption of the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS
Agreement and Public Health at the 4th Ministerial Conference of
the WTO represented an important milestone. It recognized that the
TRIPS Agreement, as an international instrument for the protection
of intellectual property, should operate in a manner that is
supportive of and does not run counter to the public health
objectives of all countries.

...

III - Integrating the Development Dimension into WIPO's Activities

As a member of the United Nations system, it is incumbent upon the
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) to be fully guided
by the broad development goals that the UN has set for itself, in
particular in the Millennium Development Goals. Development
concerns should be fully incorporated into all WIPO activities.
WIPO's role, therefore, is not to be limited to the promotion of
intellectual property protection. ...

We therefore call upon WIPO General Assembly to take immediate
action in providing for the incorporation of a "Development Agenda"
in the Organization's work program.

IV - the Development Dimension and Intellectual Property
Norm-Setting: Safeguarding Public Interest Flexibilities

WIPO is currently engaged in norm-setting activities in various
technical Committees. Some of these activities would have
developing countries and LDC 's agree to IP protection standards
that largely exceed existing obligations under the WTO's TRIPS
Agreement, while these countries are still struggling with the
costly process of implementing TRIPS itself. ...


While access to information and knowledge sharing are regarded as
essential elements in fostering innovation and creativity in the
information economy, adding new layers of intellectual property
protection to the digital environment would obstruct the free flow
of information and scuttle efforts to set up new arrangements for
promoting innovation and creativity, through initiatives such as
the Creative Commons'. The ongoing controversy surrounding the use
of technological protection measures in the digital environment is
also of great concern.

The provisions of any treaties in this field must be balanced and
clearly take on board the interests of consumers and the public at
large. It is important to safeguard the exceptions and limitations
existing in the domestic laws of Member States.

In order to tap into the development potential offered by the
digital environment, it is important to bear in mind the relevance
of open access models for the promotion of innovation and
creativity. In this regard, WIPO should consider undertaking
activities with a view to exploring the promise held by open
collaborative projects to develop public goods, as exemplified by
the Human Genome Project and Open Source Software. ...

VI - The Development Dimension and Intellectual Property
Enforcement

Intellectual property enforcement should also be approached in the
context of broader societal interests and development-related
concerns, in accordance with article 7 of TRIPS. The rights of
countries to implement their international obligations in
accordance with their own legal systems and practice, as clearly
foreseen by Article 1.1 of TRIPS, should be safeguarded. ...

VII - Promoting "Development Oriented" Technical Cooperation and
Assistance

WIPO is the main multilateral provider of technical assistance in
the field of intellectual property. By virtue of the 1995 agreement
with the WTO, it plays an important role in providing developing
countries with technical assistance to implement the TRIPS
agreement. ... must be, in particular, neutral, impartial and
demand-driven. ...


WIPO's legislative assistance should ensure that national laws on
intellectual property are tailored to meet each country's level of
development and are fully responsive to the specific needs and
problems of individual societies. It also must be directed towards
assisting developing countries to make full use of the
flexibilities in existing intellectual property agreements, in
particular to promote important public policy objectives.

VIII - A Member-driven Organization Open to Addressing the Concerns
of All Stakeholders, in Particular Civil Society

A balanced system of intellectual property protection should
service the interests of all sectors of society. ...

Currently, in WIPO, the term NGO is used to describe both public
interest NGOs and user organizations. This creates confusion and
does not seem consistent with existing UN practice, as implemented
in most of the UN specialized agencies. It is thus necessary, in
WIPO, to take appropriate measures to distinguish between user
organizations representing the interests of IP right holders and
NGOs representing the public interest.

Subsequently, WIPO should foster the active participation of public
interest non-governmental organizations in its subsidiary bodies to
ensure that in IP norm-setting a proper balance is struck between
the producers and users of technological knowledge, in a manner
that fully services the public interest.

...


*************************************************************
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providing reposted commentary and analysis on African issues, with
a particular focus on U.S. and international policies. AfricaFocus
Bulletin is edited by William Minter.

AfricaFocus Bulletin can be reached at africafocus@igc.org. Please
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Student Anti-War Conference

 National Student Anti-War Conference
            Nov. 13, 14, NYC, NY -  http://www.campusantiwar.net

Tell Senate to Fund AIDS Fight

U.S. Drug Assistance Program at Risk!

Tell Senate to Fund the Fight Against AIDS

Dear Friends of Africa Action,

Congress is about to determine the levels of funding for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program; please join us, as we demand the greatest possible amount of funding for this critical domestic AIDS program that provides life giving medicines to those who cannot afford them.

The HIV/AIDS crisis is the greatest global threat in the world today—far deadlier than the threat of terrorism. More than 18 million Africans have died of HIV/AIDS, nearly 3 million in 2003 alone. In the United States there are more than 40,000 new HIV infections each year. AIDS does not discriminate by race, and is not restricted by borders, but the reality is that it is mainly killing Black people. In the United States, HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death among African-Americans between 25 and 44 years old.

Despite these facts, President Bush and U.S. policy-makers have failed to adequately address this crisis at home or abroad. When the domestic AIDS crisis was raised in a question during the second Presidential debate, both Vice-Presidential candidates were unable to provide an answer. Vice-President Cheney admitted being unaware of the impact of AIDS on Black women in the U.S. and fumbled through explanations of international efforts. Senator Edwards was equally at a loss for words. This level of ignorance about the greatest health crisis of our times is unacceptable. Inaction is immoral.

This week there is an opportunity to let the Senate know that fighting AIDS is critical. Congress returns to Washington on November 16th to finish the fiscal year 2005 appropriations bill that includes funding for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP).

The House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate both call for funding ADAP, but the House appropriates $20 million more than the Senate. Senators Gordon Smith (R-Oregon) and Jeff Bingaman  (D-New Mexico) are circulating a “Dear Colleague” sign-on letter to their colleagues in the Senate. You can download this letter at letter The letter urges members of the joint House/Senate conference committee to support the higher funding level for ADAP provided in the House version of the appropriations bill.

Please take a few minutes to urge your current Senators (not those newly elected) to sign this letter!

TAKE ACTION!

If the above link does not work, please go to:Africa Action

Amnesty Conference - Northeast in November

  Amnesty International Northeast Regional Conference,  
            Nov. 13, 14, Boston MA
        Amnesty International

Iraq - first hand - November event

 Challenging the War: The Human Cost



           First-Hand Accounts and Images of Life in a Baghdad Neighborhood,

       5:30 pot-luck 7pm program, Rt. 116 & 47, Sunderland, MA - November 10


On November 10, 2004 Iraq Country Representatives for the American Friends Service Committee, Rick McDowell and Mary Trotochaud, will speak and share their images from Iraq at the First Congregational Church of Sunderland (on the corner of Routes 116 and 47) as part of the New England leg of their national speaking tour.

As part of their talk, Rick and Mary will offer a summary of the Letter to the Iraqi People (www.lettertotheiraqipeople.org). Begun in Franklin County, this grassroots initiative has resulted in the collection of well over 10,000 signatures from every state on a letter of apology to the people of Iraq. Rick and Mary's Iraqi colleagues have helped further this initiative in Iraq with heartening results. They will also detail current national AFSC efforts in support of US troop withdrawal and ending the US war in Iraq.

The evening begins with a community potluck supper at 5:30pm. The events are free and open to the public and concludes with a discussion of next steps. Donations welcome.

Co-sponsors include: the Peace and Justice Group of the First Congregational Church of Sunderland, the Harvest Aid working group, the Letter to the Iraqi People working group, Western Massachusetts AFSC and Traprock Peace Center.