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Press Releases: Archives: Article 9
Development: Health Care Needs Shot in the Arm,
Activists Say
By Ranjit Devraj
SAVAR, Bangladesh, Dec 8 (IPS) - Primary health care must be put back
up on the global agenda, immunising it from damage caused by economic
liberalisation and the privatisation of health services, activists said
at the end of the People's Health Assembly (PHA) here Friday.
Meeting in this remote setting 40 km outside Bangladesh's capital Dhaka,
the activists demanded the restoration of the primary health care approach
adopted at a 1978 international health conference in Alma Ata, Kazakhstan.
The demand is the cornerstone of a ''People's Charter for Health-2000,''
endorsed at the end of four days of deliberations and testimonies by more
than 900 delegates gathered here from 92 countries.
Although the charter reflected the Alma Ata Declaration in many ways,
it sought to remedy setbacks suffered by the global health sector caused
by the more recent processes of liberalisation, globalisation and privatisation
pushed by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
''Unlike the World Health Organisation (WHO), the World Bank and the IMF
are Bretton Woods institutions and not true U.N. bodies,'' said Halfdan
Mahler, who served as WHO director-general for 15 years and played a key
role in discussions here this week.
Mahler blamed the ''hijacking'' of the global health agenda from WHO by
the World Bank after 1993 and its emphasis on market-driven policies for
deteriorating health services around the world, the main concern of the
PHA.
''Governments have a fundamental responsibility to ensure universal access
to quality health care, education and other social services according
to the people's needs, not according to their ability to pay,'' the charter
laid down as a basic principle.
''You can't reverse globalisation, but you can stop people from suffering
its consequences - if large numbers come forward and protest,'' said Prem
John, Asia coordinator of PHA and director of the Asian Community Health
Action Network.
Indeed, activists said public pressure had a role to play in changing
the priorities of global institutions like the World Bank.
Asked how the just-finished PHA can change the Bank, Zafrullah Chowdhury,
programme cooridnator of Gonashasthaya Kendra, the assembly's host organisation,
said the mood created by people's movements encourages their politicians
to put pressure on the World Bank and the ''mafia'' which now runs it
behind closed doors.
''Our aim is to make it (the Bank) democratic so that every country has
one vote,'' he added.
Olle Nordberg of the Dag Hammarskjold Foundation, major donor and supporter
of PHA, said: ''The PHA has wider implcations than health. It helps people
build up their own strategies and provide an important balance.''
The World Bank and the World Trade Organisation (WTO) took a beating from
experts and activists at the PHA 2000 for ''arrogating unto themselves''
the right to set the world health agenda on hard- nosed business principles
rather than as a people-oriented service.
The charter pointedly said health was ''primarily determined by the political,
economic, social and physical environment and should, along with equity
and sustainable development be a top priority in local, national and international
policy-making.''
''Health should find a prime place. No one has the right to commodify
it,'' Abdul Matim Khasru, Bangladesh's minister for law, justice and parliamentary
affairs declared at one of the sessions this week.
Heeding demands set out by the charter was one asking for ''transformation
of the global trading system so that it ceases to violate social, environmental,
economic and health rights of people and begins to discriminate positively
in favour of countries of the South.''
Reforms, the charter demanded, should include intellectual property regimes
such as patents and the Trade Related Aspects of the Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS) agreement.
It also asked for firm commitment in the WTO framework to support measures
to protect public health, which Mike Rowson, an economist with the United
Kingdom-based activist group Medact, explained to the delegates are missing.
''While WTO gives individual governments rights to adopt or enforce measures
to protect human, animal or plant life or health, these are not defined,
leaving it open to the danger of prioritising the interests of trade and
restrict definitions considered necessary for public health measures,''
Rowson said.
Rowson said TRIPS particularly affected the rational use of drugs, and
threatened to put essential drugs out of the reach of ordinary people.
''Disputes have already risen over the leeway given through compulsory
licensing and parallel imports,'' he added.
Activists from South Asia, such as Zafar Mirza from Pakistan and Mira
Shiva from India, said the 20-year window given for pharmaceutical companies
to determine global prices for new drugs threatened to affect the control
of diseases such as malaria and hepatitis.
The charter called for radical transformation of the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) so that these institutions reflect and
actively promote the rights and interests of developing countries, and
demanded a reining in of transnational corporations (TNCs).
On social and political challenges, the charter commented that economic
globalisation and privatisation have ''profoundly disrupted communities,
families and cultures.''
''Public institutions have been undermined and weakened. Many of their
responsibilities have been trasnferred to the private sector, particulary
corporations or to other national and international institutions which
are rarely accountable to people,'' it said.
The charter itself was honed by a special committee of experts communicating
with one other over the Internet for at least two years, but each section
was put before the delegates to the PHA over the week.
At a special session Thursday, members of the committee heard and accommodated
demands by delegates asking, for example, for a ban on the use of sanctions
for military purposes since it affects the health and social development
of civilian populations.
The charter came down hard on militarist tendencies. ''Increased arms
procurement and an aggressive and corrupt international arms trade undermine
social, political and eocnomic stability and the allocation of resources
to the social sector,'' it said.
The charter also took note of environmental challenges such as water and
air pollution, rapid climate change, ozone layer depletion, nuclear energy
and waste toxic chemicals and pesticides, loss of biodiversity, deforestation,
and soil erosion, all of which affect the health of people.
But most of all, it called for a people-centred health sector and the
provision of universal and comprehensive primary health care, irrespective
of people's ability to pay. ''Health services must be democratic and accountable
with suffcient resources to achieve this,'' it stated.
Finally, activists closed the health assembly with a view to persisting
with their campaign after the meeting and said the PHA plans to function
over the Internet and plans to meet again in two or three years.
Said John: ''It took fifteen years to collect funds (1.7 million U.S.
dollars) for this one but there is momentum now.'' (END/IPS/ap-wd-he/rdr/js/00)
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