
TREATMENT
ACCESS
Appointment
of industry executive to supervise US AIDS initiative provokes criticism

US President
George W Bush has appointed Randy Tobias, former CEO and now Chairman
Emeritus of Eli Lilly & Co, one of the world’s leading pharmaceutical
companies, to supervise America’s multi-billion dollar international
AIDS initiative.
The appointment
has provoked immediate criticism for giving such a senior government role
to a high-ranking industry figure amid international arguments over whether
public money should spent on generic drugs or on more expensive branded
drugs produced by the leading drug companies.
“This
decision is another troubling sign that the President may not be prepared
to fulfill his pledge to take emergency action on AIDS,” said Dr
Paul Zeitz, Executive Director of the Global AIDS Alliance. “This
raises serious questions of conflict of interest and the priorities of
the White House. Both the people of Africa and the people of the United
States will lose if the President’s AIDS initiative fails to use
the lowest-cost, generic medications. Africans will be left with less
medicine and more will die.”
“We
call on the Senate to carefully scrutinise this nomination. Senators from
both sides of the aisle should fully investigate the continuing relationship
between Mr Tobias and the pharmaceutical industry. Hard questions need
to be asked about whether Mr Tobias will continue the Bush Administration’s
policy of blocking access to lowest-cost generic medicines for the poorest
nations.”
The Washington
Post reports that Tobias and Lilly have been major donors to the Republican
Party and to Bush’s election campaign in 2000. Later this month,
Tobias is scheduled to host a $5,000-per-person dinner for former US budget
director Mitch Daniels, a former Lilly executive who is now running for
Governor of Indiana.
The White
House, after intervention by the pharmaceutical industry, was the only
holdout blocking a WTO agreement to allow generic antiretrovirals to be
imported into nations facing public health emergencies. The White House
position went against the instructions of Congress in the fast-track legislation
to respect the Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health.
Patented
AIDS medicines can cost upwards of $10,000 per patient each year even
though generic prices have dropped to less than a dollar a day. Africa
is still waiting for access to medicine to treat AIDS and other infectious
diseases.
Source: Global
AIDS Alliance
http://www.globalaidsalliance.org
The Global AIDS
Alliance has posted on its website a report that reviews the president’s
unfulfilled promises related to the global AIDS epidemic:
http://www.globalaidsalliance.org/pledge_briefing.html
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