
Version
Espanol
Brazilian
Network for the Integration of Peoples (REBRIP)
Rio de Janeiro
clarisse@rebrip.org.br
THE
LEME CHARTER
This
document is the outcome of the National Seminar "Intellectual
Property: Interfaces and Challenges", organized by the
Brazilian Network for the Integration of Peoples (REBRIP). At
this seminar, the participants debated the drawbacks imposed
by Intellectual Property rules in different areas of knowledge
- intellectual property rules that serve to undermine the sustainability
of, and the right to, full human, economic, social and cultural
development of peoples.
To
all governments, international institutions and peoples of the
world.
We,
representatives of civil society organisations, professionals,
students and researchers, committed to the democratization of
access to knowledge, to full health and to food security, particularly
for poor people, firmly believe that if the current Intellectual
Property regime is maintained, technologically-dependent countries
and their peoples will suffer from having their human rights
greatly undermined.
Our
understanding of Intellectual Property rights and their impact
on the developing world is diametrically opposed to the logic
of free trade and economic liberalization that forms the basis
of prevailing negotiations between countries under the aegis
of the World Trade Organisation and in the ambit of other multilateral
fora. We form part of a global organized civil society movement
which has consistently demonstrated the negative impact of the
above negotiations on poor peoples, on the environment and on
biodiversity.
Exercising
our citizenship:
We
repudiate the idea of using knowledge as just one more manufactured
good. Overbearing and aggressive capitalism is encroaching on
developing and technologically dependent countries, encouraging
the perverse appropriation and privatization of intangible goods
such as scientific knowledge, information, the arts, pharmaceutical
formulae and biodiversity, as well as undermining the traditional
knowledge possessed by communities.
We
consider that it is regrettable and inconceivable that knowledge
capable of bringing about economic and social development, improvements
in the quality of life and the survival of peoples should be
treated as if it were simply a product and, as such, to be monopolized
and marketed by developed countries.
We
defend the broader participation of organized civil society
in all decision-making spheres, whether national or international,
concerning aspects related to Intellectual Property, as the
only way of exercising adequate social control. We call for
total transparency in the decision-making processes involved
in bilateral and multilateral commercial agreements and in the
adjustments effected to the domestic legislations of individual
countries.
We
call for the cessation of, and no further action on, new agreements
under the aegis of the World Trade Organisation (WTO). We are
now living the reality of a wretched situation resulting from
the substantial inequality that exists between producer nations
and those that are merely consumers of technology: in other
words, between those countries that are holders of patents and
other intellectual protection mechanisms and those who are dependent
on them. The WTO has demonstrated that the organization does
not represent the interests of developing countries and excluded
populations. On the contrary, it has contributed to the deepening
poverty and the asymmetries between rich and poor. Every effort
must be made to guarantee the right to access by all people
to essential goods, to the maintenance of and respect for current
safeguards and to insist on trade aimed at producing more sustainable
and fraternal integration among peoples.
We
reject the inclusion or continuation of discussion of topics
related to Intellectual Property in free trade agreements of
a regional nature and above all in north-south bilateral agreements,
given that the inclusion of such topics is fundamentally a kind
of currency employed to take over markets, increase the dependence
of poor countries and exacerbate existing inequalities.
We
are radically opposed to the rules that signify the spread of
the already restrictive WTO TRIPS agreements, which are abusive
and inhuman.
We
declare that:
1.
The patents monopoly on essential medical drugs and the barriers
imposed against implementation of the legal flexibilities are
the greatest obstacles impeding access of millions of people
throughout the world to treatment and to full exercise of their
right to health. The WTO flexibilities designed to improve access
to essential drugs, such as enshrined in the Doha Declaration
and the Resolution of 30 August, represent achievements by organized
civil society that has continuously clamored for priority to
be given to respect for the interests and the health of the
less privileged populations. We observe with regret that the
norms that have as their principal aim respect for human rights
and that have become part of national legislations, such as
the safeguards inherent in Intellectual Property matters, become
automatically "illegal" on the global level when efforts
are instituted to put them into practice. In other words, rights
get transformed into crimes and countries are considered a threat
and suffer retaliation from the holders of knowledge that could
indeed be rendered flexible.
2.
The media is not only economically powerful. It possesses an
substantial capacity to interfere in social and cultural processes.
The media is a classic oligopoly, consisting largely of major
transnational corporations, which distributes throughout the
planet the same films, music, books, games and news. The concept
of Intellectual Property in this sector serves only to accentuate
the power of these monopolies. At the same time, it undermines
cultural diversity (the basic key for the construction of democratic
societies) and fails to benefit those who actually produce culture.
Quite the contrary, it serves to inhibit free _expression and
the dissemination of information.
3.
The validity of patenting "inventions implemented by computer"
or in other words the so-called 'software patents', is now a
strategic concern, given the economic, social and geopolitical
power inherent in the use of such patents. This is principally
because the application of patents and Intellectual Property
rules in the information technology area involves: (a) protecting
major business empires that dominate almost the entire world
market in those goods and services that increasingly constitute
an important key to development; (b) putting obstacles in the
way of solutions being created as the result of the use of free
software and open codes for the democratization of knowledge,
the creation of skills at local level and the overall economic
development of communities. The constant threats from the north,
above all from the United States, that software piracy is an
economic problem of the south is a fallacious argument and conceals
the real interest of the above which is to keep other countries
technologically dependent.
4.
The spread of Intellectual Property rights to different areas
of life renders seeds, plants and even animals targets of patents
protection. This has caused serious harm to entire populations
and particularly to farmers and local communities. The latter
have found it difficult to access natural goods, thereby contributing
to the erosion of biodiversity and occasioning aggression to
the food sovereignty of peoples while, at the same time, providing
incentives to bio-piracy and the expropriation of the knowledge
held by local populations.
Within
the framework of the struggle for the democratization of knowledge
and in order to ensure human rights as the main guiding light
for agreements among nations, we propose establishing a space
where joint action and solidarity can be constructed in the
defense of fair trade, of the well-being and improved quality
of life for all peoples and for the building of a more equal
world. All peoples, organisations and social movements committed
to these principles are invited to join us in this struggle.
REBRIP
Executive Secretariat
Rua
das Palmeiras 90 - Botafogo - Rio de Janeiro - CEP 22270-070
Tel:
21 536-735