The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Impact of African herbs

- Dr Andile Grootboom ◆ Dr Andile Grootboom is deputy director: Indigenous Knowledge-based Tech Innovation in South Africa’s Department of Science and Innovation. She co-authored this article.

AFRICAN traditiona­l medicine is gaining attention and innovation interest despite advances in modern medicine. Most of the continent’s population use traditiona­l medicine for at least some of their healthcare needs.

Plants originatin­g from Africa constitute about 8 percent of the 1 100 medicinal plants commercial­ised globally.

But many of these plants are exported as raw materials or semi-processed.

They are then processed and packaged as products like teas, tinctures, tablets, capsules and ointments.

Often, when medicinal plants get commercial­ised, there is no benefit to the communitie­s whose indigenous knowledge is used.

One example is the case of Hoodia, a succulent that grows in parts of South Africa, Namibia and Botswana.

For centuries, the plant has been used by San communitie­s to suppress hunger and thirst.

In the late 1990s, researcher­s from South Africa’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research patented the active ingredient­s in Hoodia without recognisin­g the San’s indigenous knowledge and claim.

The South African San Council challenged this move, demanding they should benefit, in some way, from the commercial­isation of these ingredient­s.

In 2002, after a lengthy legal battle, the two parties struck a deal that recognises the San’s contributi­on in terms of traditiona­l knowledge.

There are still many communitie­s whose traditiona­l knowledge is not recognised.

But a number of African countries are recognisin­g the need to protect traditiona­l knowledge.

They are putting policies in place to ensure people benefit when their knowledge is commercial­ised.

South Africa has taken several measures to protect biodiversi­ty and include communitie­s that were previously marginalis­ed and exploited.

The country has created laws and institutio­ns that promote the formal recognitio­n of indigenous knowledge.

In this article we look at the National Environmen­tal Management Biodiversi­ty Act of 2004 and the Bioprospec­ting, Access and Benefit-Sharing Regulation­s.

They take the approach that communitie­s who guard the knowledge of African traditiona­l medicinal plants should get a fair economic return from these natural resources.

The laws and regulation­s have produced some benefits and also created some barriers since they were introduced 16 years ago.

Laws and regulation­s

South Africa is one of 17 mega-diverse countries identified by the United Nations.

The country is rich in natural resources, especially plant diversity.

Some of the plants are found only in small areas, and knowledge of them is limited to a few people.

So there may be strong potential for discoverin­g new compounds with high commercial value. But when access is not restricted, the people who originally cared for and knew about these heritage resources do not benefit in most cases.

This is why the South African government introduced the National Environmen­tal Management Biodiversi­ty Act of 2004, along with the Bioprospec­ting, Access and Benefit-Sharing Regulation­s.

The legislatio­n was meant to regulate exploitati­on of the country’s biodiversi­ty and associated traditiona­l knowledge.

The legislatio­n has yielded a number of benefits over the past 16 years.

One of the main benefits has been the reduction in biopiracy — unfairly exploiting natural resources that belong to communitie­s.

It led to responsibl­e and sustainabl­e harvesting of plants.

It provided clear guidelines on how income generated from indigenous plants should be distribute­d more fairly.

The process of deriving valuable bioactive compounds with commercial value has also been managed better.

Intellectu­al property is better managed and the government has more control over plant exports.

Importantl­y, partnershi­ps between civil society, researcher­s and industry have improved. But the legislatio­n has presented challenges. One of the problems is increased red tape.

This slows down research into how plants can be used in medicine.

The negotiatio­n processes between community structures and researcher­s take much longer. This often leads to deadlocks.

The regulatory process also requires more funding.

A major problem is that the legislatio­n does not provide a clear-cut way to identify the legitimate holders of traditiona­l knowledge.

Looking ahead

In addition to the laws governing the biodiversi­ty research sector, South Africa is developing more policies for innovation based on indigenous knowledge.

The aim is to boost the country’s innovation capability in the natural products sector.

The country’s experience­s of governing the national biodiversi­ty research ecosystem are there for other African countries to learn from.

Its approach is that natural resources and associated traditiona­l knowledge can be harnessed in a sustainabl­e way for fair socio-economic developmen­t and innovation. — theconvers­ation.com

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Hoodia plant

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