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tv   Documentary  RT  October 6, 2013 9:29pm-10:01pm EDT

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do you think that. it's justified in giving that. we can sit. back.
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the self-sufficiency philosophy on which the indian state relied since its independence changed in one thousand nine hundred five. cool in that year the world trade organization was a stablished which determines how color should be conducted world white. india became a member from the very beginning. if you. do not sign this agreement we will not create with you. now that the world has become more like a global village late you cannot go ahead and ostracize a country and say or you do whatever you want on this on we are not created with you that country will not be able to survive on its own. as member of the w t o india recognized in two thousand and five for the first time
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in its history peyton pharmaceutical products. based on the fact novartis demanded to be granted a pavement for as it claims a renewed form of. however india's pain the office rejected obligation. does not merit a paid and certificate in india. going to bid. as big as the it is. the basic public bodies behind the bit and not to get bitten on things that which is already known so good is already. solved is already to. get a bit redundant. going to get a bit until. it is already known in name to name to get a bit does that novelty the. chemical which i imagine there was
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a base product but in that form it was not medicine it was just a chemical but when the waters and its researchers did their work and created the beat it was plain form it became clear break it became. a great medicine which made. initially a disease to assure death sentence into a chronic illness and. then they back to the drug in the you know into the lane and united states children not be. it was a new compound but in india that i was not part of the system we cannot go back. and give you a fact and a ninety two more. they basically said we come to the basic so we come up with every greening application which we can put into developing countries like india and get to not be. evergreen is
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a pleasant term for a poor practice. it is the refreshment of a drug in other words you present an old drug as a new one. pharmaceutical companies use it in order to falsely pull on a drugs paid into oil to use. if you ask me in one night what it means you take the same job and patented again and again and again in different forms so the drugs are the same but the form changes so you don't come up with a new drug just to get it and reformulate. on. jake. and make it into a shooting. and that can be a different package or together so you once you've done that you get a new market you get an extension if you will not believe and indeed you have not served integration because you haven't come up with something new.
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like a pharmaceutical zoran engineering or even an all out there might be one of the cases where this is done but that does not mean it is done all the time i think the rates presented it seems to be more than the norm than the exception and i can certainly see that it is deaf we know the kids because it's a dramatic improvement on the outcome. knowing the evergreen in practice and the abuse of the paging system india maintain strict safeguard measures and it's legal says. about what can be painted and what cannot. in line with international law it was the first country to do something that others can also do. it is why those safeguards measures were at the heart of the historic legal battle between the indian state and of artists the world's largest pharmaceutical company . shall not be granted on
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a mere baby and. i lose the chills so mean if it is significant because india is the fourth. which has put borders in the manner in which you would prevent abuses of the patents and you seem documentary evidence and that unfortunately it is probably companies have been backed by the very powerful country governments for example are going to become mission expected to the incoming from the. clearly favor of its own from so to be just feet rather than looking at india as a pharmacy of the developing world all the other big manufacturing companies they do have the best in europe. they're trying to go ahead and negotiate on intellectual property rights as well because the voice. in india that might be placed into big big profit margins and know. which is which has been going
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ahead and hindering profits of big pharmaceutical companies because when they try to word and sell their products in africa for example obviously a generic pharmaceutical will be able to give a much greater price compared to what they're offering and then we both are equally good. emirs become the cheap key competitor if india starts doing it india because the prominent upload of these products then the rest of the world can also do it i think that's the challenge. i.
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know fargas claims to understand poor people's inability to access drugs and for that reason it gives glivec for free to fifteen thousand patients and meet with the help of a program that is supervised by the max foundation. and it. has been approved. and. physician. to give them money and foundation and. mr vince devised a doctor i'm self was diagnosed in two thousand and four with clinic my load leukemia. his doctor was read sturtevant of artist program and referred him to the max foundation. drug. is an expensive drug and.
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even for me it would have been very difficult to be able to afford destroyed and to be able to use it without extreme discomfort to my finances and to my living so i would not have honestly been able to afford the drug if it was not for this wonderful. people the drug is given to the patients life for as long as the physician says they need it the drug is given it's to be booed the pharma company has this kind of project. x. is a drug is this drug is a drug. fifteen thousand patients take three hundred thousand take them out. doctor. the health care system cannot rely on this project. they have. this group certain hospitals. are going to. need from that point of the charity efforts which people
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to shoot. so she responds. to note if the poor and weak use of. the succumb to the deceased because of the ability to and in division that drug. we know how to do banking it should be like infrastructure to support the economy it shouldn't be for the benefit of it leads to think they're above the law as we currently have. soldiers you're in the military now no more joking any more. never been some time in my life. every day would be pushed to an absolute limits. do you think it's going to be easy to fire. but everyone's desperate.
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just gets to. college. going to sleep i don't know if i'm going to make it to the end look i'm still filming some i'm just a token nothing left i don't know what to do. real funny. it's no good saying it's all up to your military service and you can expect some of the toughest training. for the rest of the build up to. see. millions around the globe struggle with hunger each good. what if someone offers a lifetime food supply no charge. they carry sub take in the very strong
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position against g.m.o. and we think that's. the genetic anymore the right products are priest to. there is no. evidence for this any problem with genetic engineering. is free cheese. golden rice. for several years. have been receiving the medicine from the doctors without borders clinic in mumbai. they were too expensive for private patients i
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didn't have an income and couldn't work so it was impossible for me to pay the medical bills. left everything in the hands of god i will live out the time that i am given i cannot take the medicine the drug on the market was too expensive. i thought of where to get the money. or if i should take the drug today leave it i will take it tomorrow. is something i always thought about the money. i started taking the medicines here my health improved i gained weight i eat drink tea and don't even think about the fact that i'm. now i feel very good now i
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feel that i will live. eighty percent of the drugs used by doctors without borders in their missions to offer life to patients worldwide network drugs from india. that is why the organization is one of the swiss companies. in this legal battle. it's not that you have drugs. for the next week or next month but. if you be able to treat cancer we will be able to treat hepatitis would we be able to treat drug resistant tuberculosis. and. be able to expand and treat in the same manner that we have done for example in sub-saharan africa latin america. saying that we should stop. i mean. isn't it. if you do not.
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return. again money in there for investment for future research. because to twenty percent off the top of the follow companies. it is not being given. that high speed generated by the company so i think you're to look at it. and not do more because to morrow and be. left to copy from anybody. they didn't. want this to argue that. the patent system giving
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such. having to ration. ration despite the patent system for example very few new antibiotics and why do we need. to be needed for. infection so you need new antibiotics. why would you invest in a new compound when you put back to the same point again and again and keep extending your profit. challenges that research costs huge amount to do to get a new chemical entity costs two to three billion dollars and the reason this is a huge degree will feel in the process of. their nor all until to prom night is
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a government scrambling to do research on nor do you have any other organization coming to research on abuses which will move profit and loss because if you do not allow people their returns they will just disappear because she will run over and that's a logical i'm telling the logic it's not about profits at all let me put this question back to them. after defeating thing has come up right need drugs have come up in the market i put this question back to them if you look into the data you'll find that most of the drugs which have been researched. have come into the market in nearly once most of them there were more number which came before the phaeton concept came in for example even if you were closest to seymour glass which i think it was early in nineteen hundred a wonder what it was that seems that is preventing you know why not is that the
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individual because of it they don't see profit so it. this there's a simple reason they're only looking for profits and i did look my point is i think it's clear. there is a disease that affects that most have multiple parts of the walls or the most or. the less pretty when it's part of a society. then the pic's potential for profit is very low either because the patients can look to for themselves the treatment or because their state their government they are also poor but the couple to four i don't agree i don't equate that at all in fact we have to talk of the value of the medicine not the price of the medicine because water the value all seeing the smile of the mother spurious when the child escaped from a life threatening disease waters the value that you put on improving life expectancy from forty years to eighty years what are the economic value if that
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person had been at your place and you had been in the place and that person have been selling their drugs at such a high place that you were not able to afford it. and would have would you have liked it. and how did receive it. for maybe a bit more to put i use it as. this particular piece i. am. the. principal multi-nationals should. be. in richmond instance at the expense of the city.
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to be clear. today the supreme court is to issue its verdict and put an end to the sensational court battle of novartis india that has lasted for seven years. the court's verdict will be the one to determine whether millions of patients worldwide will continue to have access to affordable drugs. and everyone is holding their breath. to get use of this dissipating and we will be getting news from the supreme court that the
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apex court has in fact dismissed no vortices appeal as one would. be. taking a trade or did against indian companies from. also that the company. has the way for indian companies to continue copying the medicine and campaign to say it means poor people will still be able to get access to cheap generic forms of lifesaving treatment. according to the courts dismiss this decision no payton rights are given to the. original pharmaceutical formulation but a new version of an older drug. the decision is to set a legal precedent for other similar cases for other pharmaceutical industries
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a meditating similar paid rights. but the great interest at stake do not leave much hope that something similar will not be attempted again in the future. for this important battle has finally been won. even before. even after the. and more greedy that is what i think this is something that you could to change i mean because once it comes to the general people of the poor people i think that that aspect has to go i cannot accept that people can die if there is treatment awaits save their lives that there is no system although that can explain or justify consensus in. science which cannot help society that new meaning. so what of the
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science be true it has to be to translate to the society is to be for the benefit of society this earth has enough to go ahead and feed all the living beings. it has enough. but it is not enough to sustain one person's greed. ok.
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thanks ok ok. p. look at the videos we get from syria these days you know people chpa topping off eating
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the intestines this is why have a far worse then something that you played in that hollywood movie lies the united states of america to stop supporting people who have ideologies that can crush humanity in the name of religion in the name of interest in the name of a new political. some mathematicians at the swiss federal institute of technology have given us a very precise answer they did a study of who owns and controls the companies on the capital markets forty three thousand companies and they found out that there's a secret super entity they call it that owns sixty percent of the earnings every year and forty percent of the assets they did this by putting the
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same people on the boards of these companies so they have ten times the economic power that they're entitled to and they thought no one would catch them at it this is a huge conglomerate that has been rigging the library prices it's been rigging all of the commodities prices it's been trading in the securities markets with insider information it has got to be stopped it also bought up all the media and has been lying to people deliberately. real damage. complexity of this oil spill is not something you just by looking at dirty birds we have between four to five million people in this directly affected area of the. it's pretty clear why it's not being reported because b.p. can't afford to have a reported all along the gulf coast are clean they are safe and they're open for business if b.p.
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is the single largest oil contributor to the pentagon the us war machine is heavily reliant upon b.p. and their oil this is a huge step backwards for the marker c. it's a step forward. carex it is toxic is a look a lot like spraying in vietnam it was it was not a picture that either the government or b.p. really wanted to have out there i don't want dispersants to be the agent. of this bill's. deliberate torch is on its epic journey to such. one hundred twenty three days. through two thousand one hundred top two cities of russia. relayed by fourteen thousand people or sixty five thousand kilometers. in a record setting trip by land air sea and others face.
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a limp torch relay. on r t r c dot com. it was a. very hard to take. once you get on a plane that you never had sex with that make their feelings. on. this. plenty
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. of. the fact that. they were going to do the job that you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioned in the constitution and. that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy correct albus. role. in fact the single biggest threat facing our nation today is the corporate takeover of our government and across several we've been hijacked why a handful of transnational corporations will profit by destroying what our founding fathers once told us i'm tom hartman and on this show we reveal the big picture of what's actually going on in the world we go beyond identifying the problem trucks rational debate and a real discussion critical issues facing america five for you ready to join the
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movement then walk a little bit. wealthy british style it's time to practice my little target. markets why not scandals. find out what's really happening to the global economy in these kinds of reports on our. mission free accreditation free in-store charge is free. range month three risk free stew type free. download free broadcast quality video for your media projects and free media and on to our teton tom.
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welcome to raw. the olympic flame arrives in moscow as the first torchbearers bring begin the four month relay for russia before it launches their two thousand and fourteen sochi winter games. celebrations for the fortieth anniversary of egypt's a last war with israel turned violent in cairo where fierce clashes between opponents and supporters of mohamed morsi was ousted regime leave scores killed and wounded. a u.s. operation in libya seizing top terror leader seized a separate raid in somalia proves unsuccessful with special forces unable to capture a wanted al shabaab militant leader. and at least a dozen children are killed in a suicide attack in iraq were targeted in elementary school.

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