Yes,
they did! Here it is. God bless Nicky Hager. He is Ndew Zealand's
No.1 investigative journalist.
NZ
WikiLeaks scoop: NZ, US in trade battle
Secret
details show NZ opposed US on issues such as copyright and medicines.
Nicky
Hager
The intellectual property issue is important to Hollywood studios such as Warner Bros, which is behind The Hobbit.
14
November, 2013
Secret
details of the United States-Pacific trade agreement have been leaked
showing New Zealand in serious dispute with US negotiators on many
issues.
These
include internet freedom, access to affordable medicines, protection
of New Zealand industrial innovation and ownership of native plants
and animals.
READ
MORE: Beginner's
guide: What is the TPP?
After
3 years of intense negotiation and with political calls for an
agreement by Christmas, New Zealand and the US are still far apart in
key areas.
The
UK-based WikiLeaks organisation has obtained the crucial
"intellectual property" chapter of the Trans-Pacific
Partnership agreement and released it exclusively to the Herald and
Mexican, Chilean, US and Australian media.
The
leaked chapter, marked "TPP Confidential", was produced and
circulated to chief negotiators at the end of negotiations in Brunei
in August. Insiders say there has been little progress in two
meetings since then.
The
95-page draft includes some of the agreement's most contentious
issues, such as copyright, patent and pharmaceutical rules.
It
contains more than 250 references to New Zealand supporting or
opposing particular clauses. In about 60 cases, New Zealand supports
the US position. But in most cases the US and New Zealand are opposed
to each other's proposals, usually with several other countries
agreeing with New Zealand.
Intellectual
property is especially important to Hollywood and US pharmaceutical,
biotechnology and entertainment corporations, which have a strong
influence over the Obama Administration's trade policy. Their
influence is seen throughout the draft document.
A
large section reveals the battle between the US pharmaceutical lobby
and countries such as New Zealand that want to continue to buy
cheaper generic medicines. The US negotiators have inserted several
pages of measures to help maintain and extend the dominant position
of big pharmaceutical companies. Only the US supported these
proposals while Australia, Peru, Vietnam, New Zealand, Chile,
Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei opposed them in full.
New
Zealand is the lead nation for a series of alternative proposals to
"adopt and maintain measures to encourage the timely entry of
pharmaceutical products to the market". Canada, Singapore,
Chile, Malaysia and Vietnam join New Zealand in proposing rules that
would avoid blocks to generic medicines.
Since
this text was written US Trade Representative Michael Froman has
publicly proposed giving developing countries a phase-in period if
they accept the US-promoted pharmaceutical rules, but this would give
no relief to New Zealand.
Other
areas of dispute are provisions that would require internet service
providers to enforce copyright of behalf of foreign corporations,
including closing down their customers' accounts; overseas royalty
payments on all books, music and movies for 20 years longer than at
present; restricting cheaper parallel importing; imposing penalties
for breaking "digital locks" such as regional zones on
lawful DVDs; allowing plants and animals to be patented; and allowing
"diagnostic, therapeutic and surgical methods for the treatment
of humans or animals" to be patented.
There
is also dispute over agricultural chemicals.
A
target of Christmas for concluding the agreement was set by President
Barack Obama last year and was reconfirmed at the TPP leaders'
meeting in Bali in October.
However
the wide differences evident between the US and New Zealand mean
someone would have to back down on national interest provisions - or
the US back down - for there to be any prospect of the agreement
being concluded. More than 100 issues are unresolved.
A
coalition of groups, ranging from Internet New Zealand to Trade Me
and the Library Association, have opposed the agreement. The Fairdeal
Coalition's spokeswoman Susan Chalmers said the New Zealand
negotiators have been sticking up for the country and called on the
Government to support them.
"If
New Zealand caves on the intellectual property chapter," she
said, "it will face inevitable economic, cultural and social
losses that in the long-term will likely outweigh any gains from
improved agricultural access."
An
earlier WikiLeaks release of US embassy cables showed former New
Zealand chief TPP negotiator Mark Sinclair privately telling visiting
US State Department Deputy Assistant Frankie Reed in February 2010
that there were "a number of areas sensitive to New Zealand"
in the TPP talks and pharmaceuticals were "bound to be a
contentious issue".
The
deal
The
Trans-Pacific Partnership is a trade deal under negotiation between
12
countries: New Zealand, US, Singapore, Chile, Brunei,
Australia, Vietnam,
Peru, Malaysia, Canada, Mexico and Japan.
What's
next
November
19-24:
TPP negotiators gather in Salt Lake City to try to resolve
issues.
December 7-9:
Trade ministers meet in Singapore.
Christmas:
Target date for concluding agreement.
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