| After years of local and global battles, cheaper generic medicines have
become more available, bringing medical treatment within reach of especially
poor people. But the right to access affordable medicines seems under
renewed attack. Laws have been introduced in east African countries which
threaten the production and distribution of generic drugs.
The inclusion of intellectual property rights in trade rules through the
World Trade Organisation's Agreement on Trade-related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) in 1994 hold very real dangers. Most
pertinent among these is poorer countries being prevented from serving the
health care needs of their populations because of prohibitions on the
production or importation of cheaper generic medicines. This has
life-or-death implications for people living in the poor South, including in
African states. On this page, IPS Africa publishes articles that interrogate
these issues.
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