| Subject: | Amnesty International: ACTA a "Pandora's Box" of Potential Human Rghts Violations; EU Governments Should Not Join |
|---|---|
| Date: | Fri, 10 Feb 2012 14:09:54 -0600 |
| From: | Peter Maybarduk <pmaybarduk@CITIZEN.ORG> |
| Reply-To: | Peter Maybarduk <pmaybarduk@CITIZEN.ORG> |
| To: | IP-ENFORCEMENT@ROSTER.WCL.AMERICAN.EDU |
http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/eu-urged-reject-international-anti-counterfeiting-pact-2012-02-10
EU urged to reject
international anti-counterfeiting pact
Amnesty International today urged EU governments not to join the
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), branding it a
“Pandora’s box” of potential human rights violations.
Starting this Saturday, 11 February, a range of civil society
groups and individual citizens have planned protests in many
European cities to voice opposition to ACTA before the European
Parliament decides whether to formally ratify the pact later
this year.
ACTA seeks to establish new standards for enforcing a wide range
of intellectual property rights, including trademarks,
copyrights and patents.
Amnesty International believes the pact's content, process, and
institutional structure impact in a number of ways on human
rights – especially the rights to due process, privacy, freedom
of information, freedom of expression, and access to essential
medicines.
“The EU should reject ACTA in its current form – implementing
the agreement could open a Pandora's box of potential human
rights violations by doing away with due process and
front-loading the requirement to enforce its provisions,” said
Widney Brown, Senior Director of International Law and Policy at
Amnesty International.
“While Amnesty believes that creators should be compensated for
their work, the protection of intellectual property should never
come at the expense of basic human rights.”
Weakened protections
Amnesty International is concerned about ACTA’s broad coverage,
vague language, and tendency to value private law enforcement
over judicial review.
Rather than allowing the courts to resolve how infractions of
the ACTA should be treated, the pact obliges states to encourage
third parties to enforce its provisions.
This would incentivize Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to
impose repressive measures to avoid infringements, such as
blocking, deleting, or even suspending services without recourse
to judicial review.
Companies may be threatened with criminal sanctions if they
derive “indirect” economic benefit from infringements or if they
are deemed to have “aided and abetted” one or more acts of
infringement. This is likely to have a chilling effect on free
speech and access to information.
As these private companies would also be incentivized to
implement intrusive surveillance technologies in order to avoid
being liable for the actions of their users, this would also
lead to gross violations of user privacy.
Access to generic medicines and other essential products could
also be affected, as the ACTA would give customs officials the
authority to seize products with labels suspected of being
confusingly similar to trademark brands. Giving generic
medicines similar labels helps to communicate medical
equivalence and supports public health policy goals.
Amnesty International is also gravely concerned about the ACTA’s
vague and meaningless safeguards. Instead of using well-defined
and accepted terminology, the text refers to concepts such as
“fundamental principles” and even invents a concept of “fair
process”, which currently has no definition in international
law.
“Worryingly, ACTA’s text does not even contain references to
safeguards like ‘fundamental rights’, ‘fair use’, or ‘due
process’, which are universally understood and clearly defined
in international law,” said Widney Brown.
Behind closed doors
A small number of states including EU members, Japan, Australia
and the USA, have negotiated the Agreement since 2007.
The negotiation process has lacked transparency and democratic
credibility, as it has taken place outside of recognized
institutions, such as the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) and the World Trade Organization (WTO).
The public was kept out of the process, and civil society,
despite its demands, has not yet had access to all documents
relating to the ACTA negotiations. US industry was kept up to
speed with the negotiations, on condition that the industry
partners signed a non-disclosure agreement.
The resulting standards are tremendously skewed towards
protecting commercial interests over human rights.
The EU – representing 27 governments – is due to start hearings
on the ACTA in March, with a ratification vote tentatively
slated for June or July.
Enforcement
The pact would set up an unelected “ACTA committee”, which would
have the power to set standards, negotiate accessions of new
countries and promote “best practices”. It would also be the
first port of call to interpret the meaning of the frequently
vague text of the agreement – creating meaning after parliaments
had given their approval.
Most of these functions are already carried out by the WIPO,
where civil society has a voice and deliberations are generally
transparent and predictable.
“All global trade agreements must be negotiated transparently
under the auspices of existing intergovernmental organizations
such as the WIPO or the WTO,” said Widney Brown.
“Multilateral trade agreements that affect public goods,
including freedom of expression, innovation and access to basic
medicines, must always uphold basic human rights principles,
such as accountability, transparency, participation, equality
and sustainability. ACTA has failed on all of these fronts.”