| The Thammasat Resolution
Building & strengthening our sui generis
rights
We, 45 representatives of indigenous, peasant,
non-governmental, academic and governmental organisations from 19
countries, came together on 1-6 December 1997 at Thammasat campus
just outside Bangkok, Thailand, for an international seminar on
Sui Generis Rights co-organised by Biothai and GRAIN. We met to
study, assess and develop our response to the increasing privatisation
of biodiversity and local knowledge, especially as driven by the
Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) agreement of
the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and resulting legislation at
the regional and national levels. We focused in particular on the
sui generis rights option for intellectual property over plant varieties
as imposed on all WTO member states by the TRIPS Agreement, as well
as on other international agreements related to biodiversity such
as the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).
In Thai, `Thammasat' means `knowledge of nature'.
It also means `justice'. The name of our venue is central to us.
Indigenous peoples, farmers and local communities have, over millennia,
nurtured and developed the biodiversity on which humanity now depends.
They have been wisely using their knowledge of nature to create
sustainable food and health systems based on sharing their knowledge
and biodiversity with others. Such community systems are being destroyed
by economic development under the guise of free trade, Green Revolution
agriculture, new biotechnologies, and globalisation. They are also
being destroyed by the rampant pirating and monopolisation of biodiversity
and related knowledge through the extension of intellectual property
rights (IPR) to life forms.
Perhaps no country exemplifies our concerns about
WTO enshrined globalisation as well as our host country. At the
time we were meeting, Thailand and much of Asia is
going through a profound crisis resulting from years of economic
growth founded upon fleeting speculative investment. The currency
tailspin which started last July is accompanied by destabilisation
of markets, loss of employment and cutting of public spending, and
results in a clear loss of control over economies and livelihoods,
with the IMF taking the steering wheel.
The WTO TRIPS Agreement obliges developing countries
to provide some form of IPR on plant varieties by the year 2000.
This may be done by patents or by some `sui generis' rights
system, meaning in Latin, a system `of its own kind'. In 1999, one
year before implementation in the developing countries, this provision
will be reviewed and we are preparing ourselves for this review.
We reaffirm our total and frontal opposition to
the extension of intellectual property rights to life forms, be
it on humans, animals, plants, micro-organisms, or their genes,
cells and other parts. We are also adamantly against biopiracy
and the monopolisation of biodiversity-related knowledge through
such IPRs.
Our understanding of sui generis rights
in TRIPS
* The overall implication of TRIPS, and for that
matter the whole of the WTO, is highly detrimental to people's economies,
cultures and livelihoods.
* The sui generis provision of TRIPS gives
WTO member states room to develop their own kind of IPR protection
for plant varieties, and many nations are now changing their national
IPR laws.
* While some people look at the sui generis
option in TRIPS as a window through which other forms of rights
over biodiversity can be articulated in legislation, it is our conviction
that such rights will be linked to IPR and will result in new and
further monopoly rights over plant varieties.
* The same is true of any sui generis rights
option which could be developed and proposed under the TRIPS Agreements
for local and indigenous knowledge.
The reaffirmation of our sui generis
rights
* `Sui generis' perfectly describes the
rights and systems we are struggling to defend - our `own kind'
of rights and systems. We recognise our sui generis rights
to exist independently of the IPR based sui generis systems
promoted by the TRIPS Agreement.
* Our rights are inalienable; they existed long
before IPR regimes were established. As legal, political, economic,
social and cultural rights, they are part of people's sovereignty
and therefore part of human rights.
* As community/collective rights, they are indivisible
and intergenerational; they include Farmers' Rights and apply to
Indigenous Peoples, peasant and family farmers, fisherfolk and other
local communities, which derive their livelihoods from biodiversity.
* Their place and expression is firstly at the
local level, but they must also be recognised and guaranteed at
the national and international levels.
* The rights that we are struggling to develop,
defend and let flourish should never be misinterpreted as, or denatured
into, intellectual property rights.
* Because people's rights are under tremendous
threat, we see the promotion of such rights also as a tool for resistance
against, and the rolling back of, the forces of monopoly.
It is on this basis that we will actively engage
our societies from the village level through to our governments
in the capitals to take part in the struggle for our sui generis
rights, and on to the international level to oppose IPR on all forms
of life. This implies a whole range of information, research, campaign
and coalition building activities over the long term. Some of the
immediate tasks at hand are to:
* Demand the revision of TRIPS in order to allow
countries to exclude life forms and biodiversity-related knowledge
from IPR monopolies under the jurisdiction of the WTO.
* Reinforce the defence mechanisms of local communities
who are highly vulnerable to unbridled bioprospecting and to the
introduction of genetically engineered organisms.
* Support any calls by local communities for a
moratorium on bioprospecting, and demand an immediate moratorium
on the research, development, release, and transboundary movement
of genetically engineered organisms.
* Assert the primacy of international agreements
on biodiversity, such as the CBD and FAO instruments, over TRIPS
and other trade regimes, for the resolution of these issues.
* Reaffirm the original intent of the CBD for the
conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and prevent the
CBD from becoming a mechanism for transnational corporations to
trade in biodiversity in the name of `access' and `benefit-sharing'.
* Mobilise a strong global movement engaging environmental,
trade, agricultural, consumer, labour, health, food security, women's,
human rights and all people's organisations in these campaigns.
In the spirit of justice and embracing all knowledge
of nature, we commit ourselves to the Thammasat Action Plan and
invite other organisations, movements and peoples to join us in
the struggle to achieve this vision.
Bangkok, 5 December 1997
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