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BUSH'S CHOICE FOR AIDS CZAR EVOKES CONCERN AND ANGER
Posted by: Anonymous on Jul 04, 2003 - 09:25 AM
Aids Crisis WASHINGTON, (Jul. 2) IPS/GIN - President George W. Bush's surprise
pick of a former top executive of a major U.S. pharmaceutical
company and major Republican contributor as his global AIDS
coordinator has drawn expressions of concern and even outrage among
activists on Africa and AIDS here.

Bush's choice of former Eli Lilly & Co. boss Randall Tobias was
announced at the White House Tuesday, just four days before Bush's
first trip as president to Africa. The nomination must be confirmed
by the. Senate.

Jeffrey Sachs, head of Columbia University's Earth Institute and
a special advisor to U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan on the AIDS
crisis, called the appointment "surreal".

"This is an emergency that requires someone who's worked in the
field and knows it thoroughly. We don't need someone who raises all
sorts of questions about commitment and agenda," he said.

The activists called for senators to closely scrutinise Tobias's
credentials and philosophy and determine whether, given his past
ties to the industry, he will be able to fight on behalf of the
millions of poor HIV/AIDS victims in desperate need of cheap
anti-retroviral drugs in the face of opposition from the major
western pharmaceutical companies, often referred to as Big Pharma.

"This decision is another deeply disturbing sign that the president
may not be prepared to fulfill his pledge to take emergency action
on AIDS," said Paul Zeitz, executive director of the Global AIDS
Alliance. "It raises serious questions of conflict of interest and
the priorities of the White House."

"Both the people of Africa and the people of the United States will
lose if the president's AIDS initiative fails to use the
lowest-cost, generic medications," Zeitz said, saying that the
pharmaceutical companies have successfully pressed the Bush
administration to go back on an earlier pledge to carve out an
exception in international patent laws that would enable needy
countries to import generic anti-AIDS drugs. "Africans will be left
with less medicine, and more will die," he said.

Others were openly scornful about the appointment. "We know he has
little experience with AIDS, but lots as a major Republican donor,"
said Salih Booker, director of Africa Action, a Washington-based
fusion of several long-standing anti-apartheid groups. "This is
where U.S. policy on AIDS is - it's with Big Pharma."

Tobias, who retired from Lilly in 1998 and more recently has served
as vice chairman of AT&T where he also worked before going to Lilly
in the early 1990s, is supposed to receive the rank of ambassador
and report to Secretary of State Colin Powell, a major force behind
a five-year, $15 billion anti-AIDS initiative -- called the
Emergency Programme" -- first proposed by Bush last January and
approved by Congress in a somewhat amended form in May.

Implementation of that initiative, which is targeted at 12
sub-Saharan African and two Caribbean countries, will be Tobias's
first responsibility, according to Bush. "Randy Tobias has a
mandate directly from me to get our AIDS initiative up and running
as soon as possible," he said Tuesday.

A corporate executive throughout his career, Tobias has no
background in public health and little or no experience of working
in poor countries. In short remarks at the White House Tuesday, he
described the statistics of the AIDS toll taken in Africa -- where
almost 20 million people have been killed by the disease -- as
"really nearly incomprehensible".

At the same time, Tobias is known as a no-nonsense businessman who
is particularly close to the recently departed director of the
administration's Office of Management and Budget (OMB), a
bureaucracy that could play a key role in securing the money to
actually fund Bush's $15 billion programme.

"This is clearly a person with tremendous stature and management
acumen," said Sandra Thurman, who served as former President
Clinton's global AIDS director and now heads the International AIDS
Trust.

The key test for many activists, however, will lie in how Tobias
responds to three major questions regarding the Bush
administration's global AIDS policies, of which the Emergency
Programme is the central feature.

The first concern involves the availability of generic anti-AIDS
and other life-saving drugs to poor countries under the Programme.
While major pharmaceutical companies have sharply cut prices on
their brand-name anti-viral medicines for AIDS victims in poor
African countries, similar generic drugs produced in India,
Thailand, and Brazil, for example, still cost significantly less
-- as little as under $300 per person per year for triple
combinations of anti-viral drugs.

While the administration has suggested it will use generics in the
Emergency Programme, it has not made a formal decision. "Tobias
will have tough questions to answer about whether the Bush AIDS
Plan will make efficient use of funds by maximizing purchases of
affordable generic medicines," noted Eustacia Smith of Health
Global Access Project (Health GAP).

A related question is whether Tobias will push the administration
to follow through on its promise at the World Trade Organization
(WTO) ministerial meeting in Doha in November 2001 to permit poor
countries that face public health emergencies to import generic
anti-AIDS and other life-saving drugs.

Under pressure from Big Pharma, the administration has since
reversed its position by pressing its bilateral trade partners in
Africa to sign agreements committing them to respect international
patent laws that, from a practical viewpoint, would make importing
generics much more problematic.

"It's very difficult to believe that a man coming from the U.S.
pharmaceutical industry would be willing to respond to the calls
from impoverished countries to expedite access to life-saving
mechanisms," said Zeitz.

"Purchase of lowest-cost medicines, including generics, is a must,"
according to Asia Russell of Health GAP. "The pharmaceutical
industry calls that piracy. Which side will Tobias be on?"

Finally, activists are particularly worried about the fate of the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, a two-year-old
multilateral mechanism to expedite the funding of anti-AIDS work
around the world. Although Congress has authorized an annual
contribution of up to one billion dollars for the Fund -- which is
already fast running out of money -- the administration has said
it intends to provide only 200 million dollars a year.

Big Pharma has been cited as a major culprit behind the
administration's miserliness towards the Fund because of its
support for making generic anti-AIDS drugs accessible to all needy
countries.

"Whether Tobias will push within the administration for the funding
of the Global Fund really needs to even begin to catch up with the
need will be critical test of whether he's independent," said
Booker.

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