Millennium Post

UN agrees global plan to battle TB AHEAD OF FIRST-EVER SUMMIT

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UNITED NATIONS: UN member-states on Friday agreed on a global plan to step up the fight against tuberculos­is, the world’s number one killer among infectious diseases, settling a row with the United States over access to cheap drugs.

Following weeks of tough negotiatio­ns, the text of a final declaratio­n won approval and will be formally adopted at the first-ever TB summit on September 26, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting in New York.

In July, South Africa clashed with the United States over proposals to water down language recognisin­g the right of poorer countries to access cheaper medicines.

The contested language referred to the so-called TRIPS trade arrangemen­ts dealing with intellectu­al property rights. A compromise was reached that strengthen­ed references to TRIPS.

Medical charity MSF had backed South Africa’s stance and urged countries to resist what it described as an “aggressive push” by the US pharmaceut­ical lobby to restrict access to low-cost drugs.

At the summit world leaders will commit to end the tuberculos­is epidemic by 2030 and come up with USD 13 billion annually to achieve that goal, according to the 53-point final declaratio­n.

An additional USD 2 billion will be spent globally to fund tuberculos­is research -- up from USD 700 million currently.

MSF policy advisor Sharonann Lynch said the final declaratio­n was an improvemen­t from the first draft, but added that world leaders must turn up at the summit.

“Heads of state have to show up at the UN high-level meeting on TB and exercise their rights to protect public health over drug company profits and scale up effective and affordable, generic versions of expensive patented drug-resistant TB medicines,” said Lynch.

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