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    Health GAP Coalition
    www.healthgap.org
    www.globaltreatmentaccess.org


    Treatment Action Group
    www.treatmentactiongroup.org

    Sign on Letter


    January 29 2001

    SEND ENDORSEMENTS TO: asia@critpath.org


    To:

    The Pharmaceutical Manufacturers' Association of South Africa
    Alcon Laboratories (S.A.) (Proprietary) Limited
    Bayer (Proprietary) Limited
    Bristol-Myers Squibb (Proprietary) Limited
    Byk Madaus (Proprietary) Limited
    Eli Lilly (South Africa) (Proprietary) Limited
    Glaxo Wellcome (South Africa) (Proprietary) Limited
    Hoecsht Marion Roussel Limited
    Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals (Proprietary) Limited
    Janssen-Cilag Pharmaceutica (Proprietary) Limited
    Knoll Pharmaceuticals South Africa (Proprietary) Limited
    Lundbeck South Africa (Proprietary) Limited
    Merck (Proprietary) Limited
    Msd (Proprietary) Limited
    Novartis South Africa (Proprietary) Limited
    Novo Nordisk (Proprietary) Limited
    Pharmacia & Upjohn (Propietary) Limited
    Rhone-Poulenc Rorer South Africa (Proprietary) Limited
    Roche Products (Proprietary) Limited
    Schering (Proprietary) Limited
    Schering-Plough (Proprietary) Limited
    S.A. Scientific Pharmaceuticals (Proprietary) Limited
    Smithkline Beecham Pharmaceuticals (Proprietary) Limited
    Universal Pharmaceuticals (Proprietary) Limited
    Warner-Lambert S.A. (Proprietary) Limited
    Wyeth (Proprietary) Limited
    Xixia Pharmaceuticals (Proprietary) Limited
    Zeneca South Africa (Proprietary) Limited
    Bayer Ag
    Boehringer-Ingelheim International Gmbh
    Boehringer-Ingelheim Kg
    Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
    Byk Gulden Lomberg Chemische Fabrik Gmbh
    Dr. Karl Thomae Gmbh
    Eli Lilly And Company
    F. Hoffman-La Roche Ag
    Merck Kgaa
    Merck & Co., Inc.
    Rhone-Poulenc Rorer S.A.
    Smithkline Beecham
    Warner-Lambert Company
    Oliver Cornish


    Dear [Plaintiff],

    We the undersigned are HIV/AIDS treatment activists, human rights advocates, women's organizations, and other concerned organizations. You are receiving this letter because you are suing the government of South Africa in an effort to maintain high prices for patented pharmaceuticals, which will prevent millions of people from obtaining life extending treatment (Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of South Africa versus the President of South Africa, case no. 4183/98). As you know, oral arguments on this case will begin March 5, 2001 before the High Court in Pretoria. This three-year lawsuit, a protracted effort to derail implementation of South African Medicines and Related Substances Control Act ("the Medicines Act"), is having a deadly impact on South African people and citizens of poor countries around the world. Therefore we demand you immediately remove yourself as a plaintiff from this lawsuit.

    The Medicines Act is an effort by the South Africa government to reform apartheid-era legislation and to increase affordable medication access for its people through familiar provisions including parallel importing, compulsory licensing, and generic drug substitution. The grave crisis in lack of access to medication in South Africa cannot be overemphasized: in the case of HIV disease, more than 4.3 million South Africans are infected with HIV but less than 0.2 percent of infected people have access to drug treatment to stabilize disease progression and extend life. Your lawsuit has tied the hands of the South African government, making it unable to implement potentially life-saving reforms while South African citizens die preventable deaths every day.

    The Medicines Act, you claim, would unfairly infringe on the intellectual property rights of drug makers and would cost substantial profits. In fact, the entire continent of Africa generates less than 1.3 percent of global profits from drug sales. Clearly your concern lies not with the lives of the tens of millions of poor people who have no access to drugs, but with protecting your unfettered access to the few in the North who are willing to pay top dollar, no questions asked.

    While a slim minority of people with HIV in wealthy countries reap the life extending benefits of overpriced HIV medications, 90 percent of the world's 36 million people with HIV have absolutely no hope of anything beyond a death sentence, including virtually all of the 4.3 million people with HIV living in South Africa. But companies-including yours-claim they are doing enough to increase HIV drug access for the tens of millions of people who have no access to HIV treatment.

    For example, the much-hyped UN/drug company HIV medication price reduction initiative, touted by industry as a far reaching, innovative program, has been roundly criticized as moving too slowly, subjecting individual countries to prolonged imbalanced negotiations, and having an unacceptably narrow impact. You and the other 41 plaintiffs in this case are preventing South Africa from implementing its domestic plan to end inequity in medication access. Battling the extraordinary devastation wreaked by the AIDS crisis requires many strategies and modes of attack-not only industry-controlled charity programs.

    We do not claim that affordable drugs are a panacea in the fight to end the global AIDS crisis. But truly affordable medication is the foundation of any meaningful effort that will actually save lives.

    The shameful three-year battle by your company and the other plaintiffs is a wholehearted effort to ensure that medication is denied to those who need it most. This lawsuit stands squarely in the path of South Africans, as well as millions from other countries who are closly watching this precendent-setting case and who are desperately seeking access to life extending, affordable medication. You have a choice: unless you take action and remove yourself from the lawsuit, you will be known forever as the company who sued to prevent the South African government from daring to increase the availability of life-extending medication for its citizens. Your lawsuit directly threatens the lives of millions. We therefore call on you to withdraw from the PMA of South Africa lawsuit without further delay.

    Sincerely,

    [List in Formation]

  • ACT UP East Bay, Oakland, CA
  • ACT UP New York, NY
  • ACT UP Paris, France
  • ACT UP Philadelphia, PA
  • AIDS Committee of Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Africa Fund/American Committee on Africa, New York, NY
  • African American AIDS Policy and Training Institute, Los Angeles, CA
  • Alissa Pines Batson, New York City Council
  • Alternative Information & Development Center (AIDC), Cape Town, South Africa
  • American Foundation for AIDS Research (AmFAR), USA
  • Anne Peticolas, Austin, TX
  • Anuar Luna, Mexican Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS/Red Mexicana de
  • Asia Russell, ACT UP/Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
  • Bill Arnold, Title II Community AIDS National Network
  • Bill Snow, San Francisco, CA
  • Brook K. Baker, Boston Global Action Network Africa AIDS Project
  • Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, Canada
  • Carlos Alfonso Rodriguez.R, Cordinador del Dpto. de Consejería, Fundación
  • Children's Rights Centre, South Africa
  • Chris Collins, San Francisco, CA
  • Claire Rappoport, Person with AIDS, Brisbane, CA
  • Claire Slatter, General Coordinator, Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era
  • Coalition for Children's Rights in an HIV Positive World, South Africa
  • Constituency Group (CCG)
  • David Scondras, Search for a Cure, Boston, MA
  • Donna Rae Palmer, Mobilization Against AIDS San Francisco, CA
  • Elena Font, Pueblos Hermanos. Madrid. España
  • Emily Bass and Cindra Feuer, Global AIDS Collaborative for Care Treatment and Support, New York, NY
  • European AIDS Treatment Group (EATG)
  • Ezio Tavora dos Santos Filho, Grupo Pela VIDDA/Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • George Carter, Direct Access Alternative Information Resources (DAAIR), New York, NY
  • Gifford Miller
  • Homer Hobi, Director, Positive Humanists and Friends
  • International, San Francisco, CA
  • Iris Long, Ph.D., AACTG CAB member at NYU Medical Center, New York, NY
  • Irl Barefield, Executive Director, AIDS Research Alliance, Los Angeles, CA
  • Isamar, Cumaná-Edo, Sucre, Venezuela.
  • Jacqueline Ambrosini, Director, Youth Health Empowerment Project, Philadelphia, PA
  • James Learned, Hepatitis C Action & Advocacy Coalition (HAAC), New York, NY
  • Janice Price, M.Ed., RN, HIV Research Coordinator, Seattle, WA
  • Jeff Getty, San Francisco, CA
  • Jeff Gustavson, Survive AIDS, San Francisco, CA
  • Jennifer Flynn, New York City AIDS Housing Network, New York, NY
  • Joan Tallada, Grupo de Trabajo sobre Tradatimento de VIH, Barcelona, Spain
  • John Iversen, former co-chair, HIV Services Planning Council, Oakland, CA
  • John James, AIDS Treatment News, Philadelphia, PA
  • John S. James, AIDS Treatment News, Philadelphia, PA
  • Joint Clinical Research Center, Kampala, Uganda
  • Judie Blair, South Africa Development Fund, Boston, MA
  • Julie Davids, Critical Path AIDS Project, Philadelphia, PA
  • Kathy Loucks, Inland Northwest AIDS Coalition, Spokane WA
  • Kenneth Fornataro, Executive Director, AIDS Treatment Data Network, New York, NY
  • Lark Lands, POZ Magazine
  • Lee Wildes, Director, African AIDS Network
  • Lee Zaslofsky, AIDS Committee of Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Lillian Thiemann, Community Prescription Service
  • Linda Grinberg, Foundation for AIDS Research (FAIR), Los Angeles, CA
  • Lynda Dee, Executive Director, AIDS Action Baltimore, MD
  • Lynda M. Dee, Esq., President, AIDS Action Baltimore, Baltimore, MD
  • Mark Harrington, Senior Policy Director, Treatment Action Group
  • Mark W. Baker, New England ProACT; Chair, Internal Committee, CPCRA Community
  • Mauro Guarneri, Italian Community Advisory Board, Rome, Italy
  • Merrill Cole, Ph.D. Seattle, WA
  • Michael Amabile, Washington D.C.
  • Michael Meulbroek, Projecte dels NOMS-SIDA, Catalonia, Spain
  • Middle East Childrens Alliance, Berkeley, CA
  • Mike Palmedo, Consumer Project on Technology, Washington DC
  • Nicole Fritz, South Africa
  • Olexiy Buyadgie, Director, New Names, Odessa, Ukraine
  • Oswaldo A. Rada, Fundation: Fundación Vivir Mejor, Cali, Colombia
  • Patricia Siplon, Ph.D., Health GAP
  • Paul Boneberg, Director, Global AIDS Action Network
  • Personas que Viven con VIH/SIDA
  • Peter Staley, AIDSMeds.com, New York, NY
  • Phill Wilson, AIDS Social Policy Archive of the University of Southern California, USA
  • Project Inform, San Francisco, CA
  • Project Inform, San Francisco, CA
  • Rev. Mother Mary Elizabeth, OSM, Sisters of St. Elizabeth of Hungary, CA
  • Richard Burzynski, ICASO, Toronto, Canada
  • Richard Jefferys, AIDS Treatment Data Network, New York, NY
  • Robert J. Munk, Ph.D., Arroyo Seco, NM
  • Robin Gorna, Executive Director, Australian Federation of AIDS Organizations
  • Rodrigo Pascal, President, VIVO POSITIVO, National Coordinating Committee of PWAs, Santiago, Chile
  • Rodrigo Pascal, President, VIVO POSITIVO, National Coordinating Committee of PWAs, Santiago, Chile
  • Rubens Duda, President, Sao Paulo State AIDS/NGO Forum, Sao Paulo, Brazil
  • Salih Booker, Executive Director, Africa Policy Information Center (APIC), Washington, D.C.
  • Sharon Ann Lynch, HealthGAP Coalition, USA
  • Survive AIDS (formerly ACT UP Golden Gate), San Francisco, CA
  • Susan Rodriguez, SMART University, New York, NY
  • Terje Anderson, Executive Director, National Association of People with AIDS (NAPWA), Washington, D.C.
  • Tim Horn, Physicians' Research Network, New York, NY
  • Tony Garcia-Peleaz, PWA Coalition Colorado, Denver CO
  • Vice Mayor Maudelle Shirek, Berkeley, CA
  • Andy Quan, Australian Federation of AIDS Organizations
  • cc:
    The Honorable Thabo Mbeki, President, Republic of South Africa
    Dr. Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, Minister of Health, Republic of South Africa
    Zackie Achmat, Chairperson, Treatment Action Campaign
    The Honorable Kofi Annan, Secretary General, United Nations
    James Wolfensohn, President, The World Bank
    Dr. Gro Harlem Brundtland, Secretary General, World Health Organization
    Dr. Peter Piot, Executive Director, UNAIDS
    The Honorable Colin Powell, Secretary of State, USA
    Robert Zoellick, United State Trade Representative-Designate
    Congressional Black Caucus


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