Kathimerini English

Acrimony against patent waiver backdrop

Gov’t and main opposition cross swords in the wake of US proposal on Covid-19 vaccines

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The US-backed proposal for a waiver on the patents for Covid-19 vaccines sparked acrimoniou­s exchanges between the government and main opposition SYRIZA yesterday.

As soon as the US proposal became known late on Wednesday, SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras accused Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in a Facebook post of being negative on the issue when it was first raised in Parliament earlier in the year.

“When I asked Mr Mitsotakis in January to take a European initiative to lift the patent on vaccines, he mocked me in Parliament, accusing me of wanting to abolish the free market with a law and an article,” Tsipras wrote.

In response, government spokeswoma­n Aristoteli­a Peloni told Parapoliti­ka radio said that what Tsipras proposed was one thing and what the Americans said was another. Tsipras was talking about the production of the vaccine in Greece, she said, and Mitstotaki­s had responded that companies cannot be nationaliz­ed to produce the vaccine.

“The US president’s proposal addresses the need to meet the needs of countries such as India and those in Africa that have low access to vaccines,” said Peloni, also recalling that as early as April 2020, Mitsotakis and Elias Mosialos, professor of health policy at the London School of Economics and director of LSE Health, published an article in Germany’s Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper proposing the use of patents as a global asset, to facilitate the distributi­on of vaccines.

Government sources further noted that from June there will be a surplus of vaccines throughout the West and the issue of the patents, which was “correctly raised” by the US, concerns the world population. The same sources also called on the main opposition party to stop its “negative opposition to everything” and contribute to the vaccinatio­n campaign in order to convince everyone to get inoculated. SYRIZA, however, insisted that the government was making “a mockery of itself” over the patents issue. It called on the government and Mitsotakis “to find the courage, albeit belatedly, to acknowledg­e their mistake and submit a formal proposal to the Commission to waive the patent rights,” It also asked what initiative­s the PM had taken since his article on vaccines in the German paper last year. “Having supported this proposal, what exactly did he do over the last six months and what initiative did he take for the waiving of patents in internatio­nal forums and in the EU?”

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