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A Reprieve for EU Vitamins and Minerals
First-round win against Codex
May 25, 2005 - A lawsuit brought by the Alliance of
Natural Health (ANH) contesting the ban of over three hundred
vitamin and mineral ingredients used in food supplements began in
the High Courts of Justice in London in 2004. The case was
referred to the European Courts of Justice in Luxembourg, where more
than a year later, the Advocate General and senior advisor to all
the European Court judges ruled in favor of the ANH.
Judge Geelhoeds' opinion is that the FSD is illegal
under EU law. The FSD infringes the principle of
proportionality, because basic principles of community law such as
the requirements of legal protection and sound administration were
not taken into account. In other words, the FSD's "Positive
List" of permissible vitamins and minerals that excludes natural
substances contained in five thousand products is perceived as too
narrow, restrictive, and based on flawed science.
Dr. Robert Verkerk, executive director of the ANH,
is delighted. "All that the ANH is campaigning and working
cooperatively for is the right of consumers to have access to safe,
natural healthcare and for legislation to be based on good science
and good law." He said, "This is a great day for the tens of
millions of people who believe passionately in the benefits of
natural preventative healthcare." Verkerk believes overturning the
FSD will set a precedent across Europe that assures the availability
of food supplements and prevents their reclassification as drugs.
The European Court delivers its final judgment on
the FSD in August 2005. The Advocate General's recommendations
are generally adopted by the residual European Court Judges.
If the ANH wins, this will scupper the long-term agenda of the Codex
Alimentarius Commission to set legal standards for vitamins and
minerals at very low doses across its 163 member countries.
The Codex Alimentarius Commission is the body that draws up
international food standards in conjunction with the Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the World Health Organisation
(WHO). Although these standards are supposed to be voluntary,
they are nevertheless adopted by the World Trade Organisation (WTO),
which levies draconian fines and sanctions on countries failing to
comply with the rules.
Traditional medicines and remedies under threat
"Harmonizing" standards of vitamins and minerals
hands control of many traditional remedies over to the
pharmaceutical companies and, in turn, to the supermarkets and big
pharmacies. This would prevent independent companies and
practitioners from supplying appropriate supplements for nutritional
purposes to patients and consumers. Under the Human Medicinal
Product Directive (HMPD), and the Traditional Medicinal Products
Directive (TMPD) (a subset of the Pharmaceutical Directive), health
claims made on dietary products will be outlawed.
Restrictions on natural products are widely seen as
an encroachment on civil liberties and threaten some of the oldest
traditional healthcare practices in the world, such as African,
Ayurvedic, Chinese, Tibetan, and South American medicine, on which
some eighty percent of the world's population are dependent.
Codex guidelines for vitamin and mineral food supplements destroy
effective remedies and give regulators the power to choose whichever
product they want and call it a drug. Further proposals
restricting amino acids, essential fatty acids, enzymes, plant
extracts, and probiotics are planned for an expanded FSD scheduled
for 2007.
The ANH points out that most of the natural forms of
vitamins and minerals such as mixed carotenoids, vitamin E, folic
acid, and selenium, along with the most digestible and safest forms
of vitamin C and magnesium are excluded from the "Positive List."
Conversely, some of the few vitamin and mineral forms associated
with adverse effects are allowed; for example, iron in the
form of ferrous sulphate that can cause stomach cramps and bowel
problems. There is also concern that a ban on natural
nutrients will encourage the use of synthetic alternatives and
genetically modified (GM) substances in food supplements.
Pharmaceutical giants have been buying up small vitamin and mineral
companies recently. For example, Merck has acquired Lamberts,
and Wyeth, a global pharmaceutical and biotechnology company, has
bought Solgar.
Corporate feudalism fuelled by patents and fees
In fact the drug companies have gained control of
natural products altogether, through PharmaPrinting, the result of
collaborations between PharmaPrint Inc. and the University of Miami.
PharmaPrinting is a technology that isolates and measures the
bioactivity of the active compounds of any plant or natural remedy
and replicates it in the laboratory. These compounds are
standardized as a pharmaceutical for government approval.
Patents are currently pending on pharmaceutical versions of some of
the most useful and widely available herbal remedies such as St
John’s Wort (depression), Echinacea (immune function), ginkgo biloba
(brain booster), saw palmetto (prostate function), and mistletoe
(alternative cancer treatment). Even the dietary herb ginger
is under patent for use as a treatment for motion sickness.
Under Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP),
PharmaPrinting involves clinical trials costing up to $6.5 million
per product and patent protection costing $0.5 million, which takes
five years to complete. Investors are reluctant to commit to
such costs unless market exclusivity is assured. One way of
creating an exclusive market is to ban or invalidate natural
remedies. The existing U.S. healthcare market, including
health foods and drinks, is estimated to be worth $1.5 trillion.
This staggering amount makes it a market worth manipulating.
Synthetic supplements also provide a royalty to drug companies each
time a patented product is purchased.
The Health Protection Branch (Canada's equivalent of
the U.S.. FDA) has called for any product registered as a "natural
therapeutic" to be registered as a drug. Fish oils
(lubricating joints), cranberry capsules
(treating urinary problems), and hawthorn berries (for the heart)
have all been issued with a DIN, a "Drug Identification Number,"
which costs $720. Without a DIN, natural products cannot be
sold, and doing so is an offence under Canadian law. DIN
entails still further costs: an annual licensing fee, GMP
annual inspection, yearly assessment fees, foreign assessment fees,
an analysis fee, and Health Protection Branch inspection fees.
Strict controls and fees are unwarranted for natural
products with no record of adverse health effects in Canada.
In contrast, conventional drugs kill six hundred hospital patients
in Ontario alone, while prescription drugs are responsible for ten
thousand deaths every year.
Foods are not drugs
"Food as drugs" guidelines laid out by Codex were
adopted by Australia, Denmark, Germany, and Norway, and many
products have been co-opted by the pharmaceutical companies and
repackaged as drugs. (See
"European Directive against vitamins and minerals"). India
has resisted Codex, so has Japan, Un the U.S., Congressman Ron
Paul has put forward the Health Freedom Bill (HR 4004), which
prevents the Federal Government from restricting the distribution of
a dietary supplement or other nutritional food because the
manufacturer makes health claims unapproved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA).
The South African government also opposes Codex and
highlights the role of vitamins and minerals in accordance with the
World Health Organisation report, "Diet, Nutrition, and Prevention
of Chronic Diseases" (2003). Codex rejects the report, despite
its close links to the WHO. Dr. Manto Tshabalala-Msimang,
South African health minister, told her department, "I would like to
avoid the pitfall of putting such products in the same regulatory
environment as pharmaceutical drugs, whose testing and control is
very different." She allocated six million rand into testing the
safety and quality of traditional medicines used as immune boosters
by people living with "Nutritionally Acquired Immune Deficiency
Syndrome (NAIDS)," usually referred to as HIV/AIDS.
Recent action by the WHO, UNICEF, and an AIDS
activist group promoting drug therapy in South Africa attack vitamin
therapy that exceeds Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA).
In Unravelling AIDS, a new book from ISIS
published later this year, we examine how numerous essential
nutrients are effective in preventing and treating NAIDS, HIV/AIDS,
and other chronic diseases. The WHO and the United Nations
(UNICEF) appear to be backing the sole use of drug therapy at a time
when drug-resistant strains of HIV are on the increase.
ISIS opposes the Codex agenda of restricting access
to natural products by treating them as pharmaceutical drugs.
It takes away our rights to food and health-promoting nutrition, and
allows the pharmaceutical corporations to profit from pirating and
expropriating herbal remedies that have been the mainstay of
traditional healthcare systems for millennia.
The Institute of Science in
Society, PO Box 32097, London, England NW1 OXR.
This
article can be found on the I-SIS website.
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