[Ip-health] Bridges Weekly: WIPO GENERAL ASSEMBLY TAKES OFF AMIDST CONTROVERSY OVER IDRIS' AGE
Thiru Balasubramaniam
thiru@keionline.org
Thu Sep 27 05:46:01 2007
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[ Picked text/plain from multipart/alternative ]
BRIDGES Weekly Trade News Digest - Vol. 11, Number 32 26 September 2007
In Brief
WIPO GENERAL ASSEMBLY TAKES OFF AMIDST CONTROVERSY OVER IDRIS' AGE
As the World Intellectual Property Organization's annual General
Assembly kicked off on 24 September, member delegations were
preoccupied by an issue that had nothing to do with intellectual
property, development, or innovation: the age of WIPO Director-General
Kamil Idris.
WIPO's highest decision-making body will meet through 3 October, and is
set to consider the future of the 'development agenda', a series of
proposals to integrate development concerns into all of the
institution's activities.
However, as the meeting opened, delegates focused mainly on a
provisional agenda item with the unrevealing title of "WIPO Internal
Audit Report Number IAOD/INV/2006/2 of November 2006 and Appropriate
Follow-up Thereto." This report confirmed explosive allegations that
Idris had changed his official year of birth from 1945 to 1954 in WIPO
records after joining the institution. Being born in 1945 would have
allowed Idris to be hired at a more senior level; subsequently changing
it to 1954 would have created potential for financial benefits upon
leaving his job. Idris' conduct violated staff rules, the audit found.
Prior to the meeting, the US managed to secure the confidential
report's place on the provisional agenda, setting the stage for a
discussion of Idris' fitness to continue at the helm of WIPO.
Switzerland, Japan, Canada, Australia, and Canada backed the US'
efforts.
Opposing the discussion of the audit was the 53-member African Group,
which argued that the age issue was best discussed privately, and was
in any case not important enough to cause the Sudanese WIPO chief's
dismissal. The WIPO Secretariat, for its part, decried attempts to
"destabilise" the organisation, and rejected the suggestions that Idris
stood to benefit from the age change. Argentinian Ambassador Alberto
Dumont and some other developing country delegates expressed concern
that the age issue risked distracting attention from more important
issues including the development agenda.
Notably, the UK and the EU did not openly push for the debate on Idris.
On 25 September, a compromise was struck under which a group of
'friends of the chair' would examine the audit and report back to the
General Assembly. Sources suggest the group will comprise one official
from each of the various regional blocs, as well as alliances such as
the EU and the G-77.
The assembly is also set to discuss the fate of moribund discussions on
a potential treaty to protect broadcasters' rights, and whether to
extend discussions on traditional knowledge and genetic resources.
ICTSD reporting.
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Thiru Balasubramaniam
Geneva Representative
Knowledge Ecology International (KEI)
voice +41.22.791.6727
fax +41.22.723.2988
mobile +41 76 508 0997
thiru@keionline.org
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