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BIODIVERSITY:
Creating a
Network Against Biopiracy
Mario Osava
CURITIBA, Brazil, (IPS) -
Two patents granted in the
United States between 2000 and
2002 and another for which an
application has been filed have
put "maca", a high altitude
Andean plant that is used by
indigenous people in Peru, at
the centre of a new battle
against biopiracy, which
involves the construction of an
international network against
the misappropriation of
traditional knowledge.
One of the patented maca-based
products claims to raise
testosterone levels. But the
countries that registered the
plant "did not invent a thing,"
said lawyer Isabel Lapeña, with
the Peruvian Society for
Environmental Law. "They merely
took advantage of indigenous,
campesino knowledge of the
plant, which is known as
‘natural viagra'," she told IPS.
News of the patent was met with
howls of outrage, and a working
group was set up by campesinos
(peasant farmers) and scientists
to study maca-related patents
that have been registered in the
United States, and investigate
ways of challenging them.
A National Commission for the
Protection of Biodiversity and
"the collective knowledge of
indigenous peoples" was also
established two years ago.
Peruvian activists are now
encouraging the replication of
their experience, through the
creation of similar movements in
other countries, by means of the
Andean-Amazon Initiative for the
Prevention of Biopiracy.
The initiative, which is to be
extended beyond South America's
Andean and Amazon regions, so
far includes partner
institutions in Brazil,
Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela.
The idea is to combat all kinds
of biopiracy, and it is useful
to be able to refer to cases
that have had major
repercussions, like the ones
involving maca in Peru and
cupuaçú in Brazil, said Lapeña.
Cupuaçú is an Amazon fruit from
the cacao family, which is used
to produce chocolate-like
sweets, beverages and other
products for export. Several
years ago, a Japanese company
registered the name of the fruit
as a trademark, but thanks to
legal action, the patent was
annulled.
Today, Amazonlink, the same
non-governmental organisation
based in the Amazon jungle state
of Acre that spearheaded the
campaign "Cupuaçú Is Ours" is
focusing on another case of
biopiracy.
Several U.S. companies,
universities and researchers,
including the Seattle-based
ZymoGenetics Inc., have filed
for patents for a toxin found in
the skin of the Monkey frog (Phyllomedusa
bicolor).
The secretion has traditionally
been used by indigenous
communities in the Amazon jungle
in shamanic hunting rituals.
Pharmaceutical companies and
researchers found that the
secretion contains new peptides
that have analgesic properties
and are capable of combating
ischemia, a condition in which
the blood flow (and thus oxygen)
is restricted to a part of the
body, said Michael Schmidlehner,
president of Amazonlink.
"We do not want to overturn the
patents," said the activist, who
also pointed out that synthetic
versions of the peptides have
already been produced.
But the case serves to highlight
the need for "informed prior
consent", as established by the
Convention on Biological
Diversity, before traditional
knowledge is used, and to
distribute the benefits of such
knowledge among its holders, he
said.
What such cases involve is
"theft," said Manoel Roque de
Souza, better known as Roque
Yawanawá, from the Yawanawá
people in the state of Acre.
The Yawanawá are among the
communities that use the
secretion from the frog for
medicinal and ritual purposes,
as do other indigenous groups in
Brazil and Peru, like the
Katukina, Ashaninka and Kaxinawá.
The case of the Monkey frog
prompted the Yawanawá leaders to
contact Amazonlink to help
orient their actions. That gave
rise to the "Vigilant Villages
Project", aimed at raising the
awareness of, and training,
indigenous communities to help
prevent corporate biopiracy.
The Initiative for the
Prevention of Biopiracy is
seeking to expand the network of
organisations involved in
fighting biopiracy, encourage
investigations, disseminate
information, and even influence
institutions that deal with
patents, like the World Trade
Organisation (WTO) and the World
Intellectual Property
Organisation (WIPO), said the
Peruvian activist, Lapeña.
Many of the patent applications
filed in Brazil do not even
mention the origin of the
genetic material that was used
to make the product in question,
said Henry Novion, with the
non-governmental
Socioenvironmental Institute
(ISA).
The Mar. 20-31 Eighth Conference
of the Parties to the Convention
on Biological Diversity (COP8)
taking place in the southern
Brazilian city of Curitiba is
tackling several related issues.
The most controversial aspect of
the debates involves access to
genetic resources and the
distribution of the benefits
derived from them, a point of
especial interest to "megadiverse"
countries - countries with
enormous biological diversity -
and indigenous and other rural
communities.
The creation of an international
regime to regulate such
questions, within the framework
of the Convention on Biological
Diversity, has been proposed. It
would include mechanisms to
ensure that the holders of
traditional knowledge receive a
fair share of the benefits
generated, monetary or
otherwise.
Another point of concern for
indigenous and other local
communities involves the
protection of "traditional
knowledge, practices and
innovations," as an aspect of
the conservation and sustainable
use of biodiversity, in
accordance with the commitment
assumed by the signatories to
the Convention. But so far, few
nations have adopted programmes
or taken steps towards that end.
The Convention on Biological
Diversity is seen by many
environmentalists as a
counterweight to the WTO when it
comes to the question of
patents. "In the WTO, the rights
of traditional knowledge-holders
are not taken into
consideration," complained
Lapeña.
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