Top officials of six global organizations have called for greater coordination among relevant national and international bodies in the fight against illicit trade in medical products, which puts the health and livelihood of people all over the world at risk.
Speaking at a high-level roundtable held at the 2022 Aid for Trade Global Review, they shared perspectives on activities they are undertaking and how they could engage in closer cooperation.
Participants agreed on the need to strengthen public awareness activities, to support developing countries in procuring legitimate medicines and to help them in the fight against illicit trade in medical products.
World Trade Organization Director General, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala outlined her long-standing concerns about illicit trade, “Time and again, we see how illicit trade is threatening people’s health and livelihoods, and how it undermines legitimate business activity and abets corruption.”
DG Okonjo-Iweala added, “By working together as an international community, we can seize opportunities to fight this kind of illicit activity while, at the same time, strengthening licit trade, especially in poor countries with poor capacity.” She called on international organizations to step up efforts to raise awareness among public leaders and national officials about the urgency of tackling illicit trade.
Assistant Director-General of the World Health Organization Mariângela Simão emphasized that the rise of e-commerce has turned illicit trade in medical products in particular into a “global problem” that demands more attention from the international community.
Director General of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) Gerd Müller said that “the circulation of low-quality and unsafe medical products affects the poorest the most”. He also noted that “we need a strong coalition of international organizations to expand production of quality medicines and to fight trade in illegal medical products”.
Secretary-General of the World Customs Organization Kunio Mikuriya noted that “customs are playing a role of facilitating legitimate trade but we are also the first line of defence in the fight against illicit trade which is posing safety and security risks”. He highlighted the importance of access to data, information sharing and coordination of capacity building activities to assist customs officials around the world in combatting illicit trade.
Assistant Director-General of the World Intellectual Property Organization Edward Kwakwa stressed the importance of enhanced cooperation in fighting illicit trade in medical products “to create a stronger, more united response and to avoid reinventing the wheel”.
In her video message, Secretary-General of the UN Conference on Trade and Development Rebeca Grynspan warned that “illicit trade in medical products endangers our development by endangering our health”, adding that “if we are to build resilience against future pandemics, combating illicit trade in medical products is absolutely essential”.
The WTO’s Deputy Director General Anabel González, who moderated the event, underscored this point: “The nefarious forces that drive illicit trade in medical products are difficult to uncover, and even more difficult to counter. But despite the secrecy that cloaks illicit activities, one thing is certain: the battle against illicit trade is not one in which a single country will emerge a winner, nor one that a single international organization or any other actor can fight alone”.