Bill Gates Doubles Down On Opposition To "Open Vaccine" Movement
Bill Gates Doubles Down On Opposition To "Open Vaccine" Movement
BY TYLER DURDEN TUESDAY, APR 27, 2021 - 02:55 PM
Roughly one year after the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
seized control of the global response to COVID-19 with the goal of providing
"equitable access" to a vaccine, Bill Gates & Co. have
accomplished the opposite: The Covid-19 ACT-Accelerator mechanism, backed
by the Gates Foundation, has a stated policy of respecting the exclusive
intellectual property rights of western drugmakers. At the same time, the
WHO-backed alternative solution, known as Covid-19 Technology Access Pool, or
C-TAP, which was supposed to foster an open-source pool of vaccine and drug
technology, has mostly faltered.
As India's second-wave COVID-19 outbreak spirals out of control,
more parties have come forward to criticize Gates for his support of IP
protections. Considering the scarcity of the medicines, there have been
increasing calls from countries like India and South Africa, international
relief organizations and other public figures to waive IP protections so that
poorer countries can get faster access to the vaccines. WTO Director General
Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has led a host of emerging-market nations in a push to
waive IP protections, arguing that numerous facilities exist that could ramp up
production in the coming months.
But as pressure to reconsider this stance mounts, Gates insisted
during an interview Monday with Sky News' Sophy Ridge that stripping IP
protections from vaccine recipes wouldn't be helpful. Asked point blank about
the issue, Gates responded with an emphatic "no".
"The thing that’s holding things back in this case is not
intellectual property. It’s not like there’s some idle vaccine factory, with
regulatory approval, that makes magically safe vaccines. You know, you’ve got
to do the trial on these things. Every manufacturing process has to be looked
at in a very careful way," Gates explained. "There are all sorts of
issues around intellectual property having to do with medicines. But not in
terms of how quickly we’ve been able to ramp up the volume here."
Watch the full interview below:
As
Gates sees it, his foundation has helped to accelerate the pace of vaccine
testing and design by years. In the past, it would likely have taken decades
for poor nations to get supplies from rich states that designed them.
"Typically, in global health it takes a decade between when a vaccine
comes into the rich world and when it gets into the poor countries," Gates
said.
While Gates apparently can't see past how things were done in
the past, critics quickly pointed out that countries like the US are already
stockpiling more vaccines than they can use. And while Gates insists
that there aren't any factories in the developing world capable of making
patented western jabs, India's Serum Institute is an obvious example of how
this simply isn't the case. Plus, many of the countries pushing the vaccine IP
waiver at the WTO have identified facilities where vaccine production can be
ramped up quickly.
Opponents of this approach from within the pharmaceutical
industry are scrambling to lobby the Biden Administration to oppose the waiver
push at the WTO after a recent speech by Katherine Tai, Biden's top trade
official, stipulated that Washington would "consider what modifications
and reforms" can be applied to intellectual property rules. Among other
risks, Big Pharma is arguing that an "open" vaccine would benefit
American rivals like China and Russia.
But the reality is that billions of denizens of the developing
world stand to benefit, while drug companies and the international
pharmaceutical industry stands to miss out on some profits.
https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/bill-gates-doubles-down-opposition-open-vaccine-movement
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