|
CODEX
RED ALERT- U MUST FORWARD TO SENATE (BETTER YET ALL MEMBERS
OF CONGRESS)
This article
was written upon request from a member of Senator Hatch's staff
who is trying to understand our concerns about the harmonization
language in S.830 (see http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/hammell/s830-sen.txt)
(explains how S.830 is dangerous)
It is imperative
that we get the harmonization language removed from S.830, or
our food and drug laws will be made the same as the European
Union's. (We must be equally vigilant regarding a house companion
bill, although none has been introduced yet.) As this article
discusses, the EU is on the verge of severely restricting access
to dietary supplements (unless consumers there rally to fight
back hard.) Please email and fax this before Friday, 9/19 to
every member of the Senate along with the notice posted on my
website at http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/hammell/s830-sen.txt (The
Senate will invoke cloture tomorrow 9/16, and will probably vote
on S.830 on friday.
REBUTTAL TO
FDA'S MEMO WHICH ASSERTS THAT CODEX POSES NO THREAT TO AMERICAN
VITAMIN CONSUMERS
by John C. Hammell,
legislative advocate International Advocates for Health Freedom
2411 Monroe St. Hollywood, FL 33020 USA 800-333-2553, 954-929-2905,
fax 954-929-0507, fax on demand 954-927-8795 http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/hammell/index.html
On January 30,
1996 the FDA sent a memo of rebuttal to people who had expressed
concern regarding the proposed draft guidelines for dietary supplements
pending before the Codex Alimentarius Commission Committee on
Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Uses, which was held
in Bonn, Germany in October of 1996. (The complete text of FDA's
form letter can be found at http://www.healthy.net/public/legal-lg/fedregs/fdacodex.htm)
People had expressed
concern that the proposed guidelines would "nearly end my access
to dietary supplements in the United States" and would create
circumstances where "manufacturers will not be able to advertise
the numerous health benefits of taking dietary supplements." Furthermore,
people stated that they were "angry that the U.S. gave away so
much of our sovereignty by signing the GATT."
FDA asserted
that these contentions are unfounded, and alleged that they stem
from a misunderstanding of the requirements by which the US is
obligated to abide by as a signatory to GATT.
FDA went on to
assert that there was nothing in the trade agreements or coming
out of the process that will either restrict the sale of dietary
supplements in the US or the type of information that manufacturers
could put out to consumers about their products.
FDA went on to
assert that the response they were formulating for the meeting
in Bonn would be developed in accordance with applicable US law,
and that it would consider all comments received before developing
the US position.
FDA went on to
question the assertion that by participating in the Codex process,
we are surrendering to an international organization our sovereign
authority to protect the health and safety of Americans. They
went on to state that under the SPS Agreement, the US does not
relinquish its rights to enact and enforce laws to ensure the
health and safety of its citizens. They state that "while the
SPS Agreement contains a general obligation to use international
standards, it protects the ability of governments to use different
standards if they determine that the relevant international standard
does not adequately meet their nation's food safety needs."
FDA ends their
spin controlled rebuttal by trying to put people to sleep, asserting
that "the proposed guidelines for dietary supplements are at
a very early stage in their development" and they discussed the
fact that the process can take several years. They discussed
the fact that there will be opportunity at each step for comments
and revision to be made on the proposal, and they stated that
they could not predict if the Committee would eventually adopt
final guidelines, and if so, what recommendations the guidelines
would contain. In order to assist people in fighting back world
wide (resulting in the German proposal being knocked back to
step 3 from step 5), I have been too busy writing articles, organizing
and doing public speaking about the Codex International threat
to health freedom to bother rebutting FDA's spin controlled memo
of January 30, 1996, but am doing so now due to a request made
in September 1997 from an aide on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Although many
of the FDA's statements are technically true, they are also quite
misleading. This can readily be seen from the comments submitted
by Suzanne Harris, JD of the Law Loft on behalf of the Life Extension
Foundation to the Codex Commission at about the same time the
FDA issued their rebuttal. (See Life Extension Foundation's Codex
comments as submitted to the FDA and to the Codex Commission
prior to the Bonn meeting at http://www.lef.org/cgi-local/shop.pl/page=codex-comments.htm/SID=1550224382
Consumers
were (and still are) quite correct in expressing concern about
the Codex process, because they were correctly perceiving a process
which did (and still does) threaten their access to dietary supplements.
This is even more obvious now, on September 15, 1997 than it
was when FDA issued their memo 18 months ago. If consumers, and
vitamin companies don't exercise vigilance, and don't continue
monitoring these proceedings, it is obvious that we will lose
our access to dietary supplements.
Although it is
true that the FDA did uphold US law by voting against the German
Codex proposal in Bonn, despite the strong objections of the
US, UK, Canada, Netherlands, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand,
the draconian German proposal advanced over our objection from
step 3 to step 5 in the 8 step process, indicating that consumers
concerns were (and are) quite justified. I was in Bonn as a member
of the American Codex delegation, where I saw what happened.
One thing that happened was that Dr.Cheney of the FDA supported
a motion by the Canadian delegate to create a Special Panel to
examine the issue of whether or not to create a negative, or "no
trade" list of herbs.
Cheney never
conferred with the rest of the delegation to see whether or not
we supported the Canadian motion, which I opposed. (Allegedly,
Cheney cared about our views.) I discuss what happened in Bonn
in my "Report from Bonn" which is available at http://www.lef.org/cgi-local/shop.pl/page=codex-bonn-report.htm/SID=1550224382
Although the
German Codex proposal was later set back to step 3 at the meeting
this past June in Geneva, that was only due to my efforts to
sound an international alarm, especially in Canada where I did
a lot of public speaking and galvanized the public on the issue.
My articles were also published in Australia and New Zealand
and influenced a public outcry there. I am working with people
in Australia, Canada, and South Africa who have filed lawsuits
against their governments for overly restricting access to dietary
supplements. Consumers were, and still are quite justified in
expressing great concern about this process. Although the German
proposal was knocked back to step 3, harmonization efforts around
the world currently threaten to enable it to move forward once
again. See the Canadian section of the IAHF website at http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/hammell/index.html#canada
At issue is not
just the German codex proposal, but Codex harmonization efforts
which are ongoing, world wide, in an effort to restrict natural
products. In Canada, by working with Freedom of Choice in Health
Care out of Toronto, we filed a lawsuit against the HPB which
stopped the third phase of cost recovery, which would have driven
a lot of small to mid sized manufacturers out of business. Cost
recovery is an illegal tax that was never debated by parliament,
which was scheduled to be levied against dietary supplement companies.
Cost recovery was scheduled to go into effect in July, but the
lawsuit was filed just in time to stop it.
The European
Commission has circulated a start-up position paper titled "Addition
of Vitamins and Minerals to Foods and Food Supplements" to which
comments are due before September 30, 1997. Since the EC is the
primary entity which generates proposals for new legislation
for the EU (the Council of Ministers being the body that actually
formally creates new legislation in the form of European Union
directives), having read the text, I view the circulation of
this document as a first step toward tightening EU regulations
against dietary supplements and fortified foods even more than
it has in the past. A copy of the EC discussion paper can be
procured from Consumers for Health Choice, Abbey House, 4 Abbey
Orchard Street, London, UK SW1P2JJ Tel.44-171-222-4182, Fax 44-171-222-4192,
email 106021.2507@compuserve.com
Moreover, EU
law supersedes the laws of the individual countries that are
members of the EU. In other words, the nations that are members
of the EU are free to promulgate their own laws on particular
subjects unless and until the EU issues a "directive" on the
topic and removes the right of the individual countries to legislate
for themselves in that particular area.
So far, since
the promulgation of EEC 65/65, dietary supplements have technically
fallen within the classification of drugs since they have preventive
and therapeutic effects. However, individual nations have been
left relatively free to regulate them on their own. The Nordic
Council, as a regional trading bloc, has already heavily restricted
dietary supplements by harmonizing their laws with WHO guidelines
for dietary supplements, but that decision did not extend beyond
the Nordic countries to the rest of Europe. An upcoming EU decision
would heavily restrict the rest of Europe, much as the Nordic
countries have already been.
In an increasingly
global marketplace, what happens in any large market like the
EU is of interest because it has commercial implications for
our own companies and indirectly for our own ability to access
dietary supplements. If European products can monopolize the
European marketplace because dietary supplements are classified
as drugs, obviously our companies lose market access.
Conversely, as
the EU products enter the US market as drugs, the EU products
will be better able to compete here than domestic products because
as drugs, they will be labeled with preventive and therapeutic
indications. (While this process is not complete, it is definitely
happening. The European-American Phytomedicines Coalition has
already petitioned the FDA for O-T-C drug status for European
products, and the Commission on Dietary Supplement Labels will
be recommending the expansion of the OTC drug category as a result.
(See comments submitted on August 4, 1997 by the European-American
Phytomedicines Coalition to the Commission on Dietary Supplements.
Comments were filed by their multinational law firm, Akin, Gump,
Strauss, Hauer, & Feld, L.L.P. 133 New Hampshire Ave. N.W.,
Ste. 400, Washington, DC 20036, 202-887-4000
From a standpoint
of defending American exports of dietary supplements abroad,
it is imperative that we NOT blur the lines between foods and
drugs, but keep our dietary supplements classed as FOODS. If
we ever have to go before the dispute settlement body of WTO
to contest an effort to blockade our vitamins, we'd stand on
far more solid grounds if the products were regulated as foods
(under the Sanitary Phytosanitary Measures Agreement), than if
our products are regulated as drugs (which fall under the Technical
Barrier on Trades Agreement.) This is due to how risk/benefit
is measured under these respective agreements. (It is much easier
for another country to justify blocking the import of dietary
supplements on scientific grounds if we class them as drugs,
because the risk benefit analysis under TBT is far more stringent.
If we classify them as foods, and a country tries to arbitrarily
block them due to safety concerns, they wouldn't have a leg to
stand on before the Dispute Settlement Body. (See the NHF-LEF
Comments to the President's Commission on Dietary Supplement
Labels, by Suzanne Harris at http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/hammell/cdsl-su2.html)
Moreover, President
Clinton has announced the conclusion of an MRA, multi recognition
agreement between the US and EU with sectoral annexes covering
GMPs for drugs and for food products contained from animals (i.e.
meats, eggs, cheeses, etc.) These MRA annexes empower European
inspectors to act on behalf of the FDA and vice versa. It is
clearly the intent to harmonize, that is, to make the US and
EU food and drug laws the same across the board. (See the Agreement
on Mutual Recognition Between the United States and the European
Community at http://www.ustr.gov/index.html)
What we are seeing
here are the opening salvos in that USA/EU harmonization process,
(although the intent to proceed in this manner goes all the way
back to 1980 in closed door meetings at ICDRA (The UN's International
Council of Drug Regulating Authorities, the umbrella group which
coordinates the activities of FDA, HPB, MCC, TGA, etc, world
wide.)
It is also the
intent to harmonize EU and US laws that deal specifically with
dietary supplements as well as other foods and drugs. S.830,
the currently pending FDA Modernization and Accountability Act
of 1997 (on which a cloture vote will be held tomorrow in the
Senate) says point blank that the FDA's new mission is to work
towards harmonizing US laws that it administers with EU laws.
Harmonization language is specifically put forth in sections
101, 202, and 807. (See S.830 http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/D?c105:2:./temp/~c105gUg4::
Given the fact
that the only two countries in the EU holding out against severe
restrictions on dietary supplements to only slight multiples
above RDA are the UK and Holland, and given the fact that the
UK Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Foods (MAFF) has announced
on their website that they intend to restrict vitamin B-6 to
just 10 mg without a prescription, there is no reason for Americans
to feel complacent about the harmonization language in S.830.
(If MAFF is able to impose their arbitrary ban on B-6 above 10
mg, there would be nothing to stop them from harmonizing the
UK's food and drug laws with the EC's, and we would lose them
as allies against the German Codex proposal. See MAFF's July
press release on vitamin B-6 at http://www.maff.gov.uk/inf/newsrel/1997/jul/970704A.HTM
Consumers are
quite correct to be concerned when legislation such as S.830
empowers the FDA to harmonize its regulations to match the EU's.
Consumers are quite correct to monitor all activities of the
FDA's Office of International Relations, and to be distrustful
of international bodies such as the Codex Alimentarius Commission
which are very heavily influenced by delegates representing pharmaceutical
interests. (See FDA's Office of International Relations at http://www.fda.gov/oia/fdaintl.htm,
See Codex Alimentarius Commission at http://www.fao.org/waicent/faoinfo/economic/esn/codex/codex.htm)
Additional information
about the Codex International Threat to Health
Freedom is available on the IAHF website at
http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/hammell/index.html
******************************************
Donations Needed- Am One Person Working Alone
International Advocates for Health Freedom
John C. Hammell, Legislative Advocate
2411 Monroe St.#2 Hollywood, FL 33020 USA
800-333-2553, 954-929-2905, FAX 954-929-0507,
FAX ON DEMAND 954-927-8795,
jham@concentric.net
http://www.pnc.com.au/~cafmr/hammell/index.html
***********************************************************************
BIOWAR-L Biowar/Bioterrorism/Toxins Mailing List
To unsubscribe or subscribe: send a message to majordomo@lists.sonic.net
with the following text: unsubscribe biowar-l or subscribe biowar-l (letter
"
l"). Post to: <BIOWAR-L@mail.sonic.net>. Previous posts:
<
http://www.sonic.net/~west/digest.htm>. BIOWAR Web site:
<
http://www.sonic.net/~west/biowar.htm>. -Wes Thomas <west@sonic.net>
***********************************************************************
Tetrahedron, LLC
PO Box 2033
Sandpoint, ID 83864
Toll free order line: 888-508-4787
tetra@tetrahedron.org (email)
http://www.tetrahedron.org/ (website)
*********************************************************
Health Science Communications for People Around The World
Specializing in Health Science and Government Cover-ups
*********************************************************
The information
provided at this site is educational in
nature, and should not be considered medical advice.
Healthcare decisions should be based upon critically evaluating
all available information. This is the responsibility of
every consumer.
********************************************************* |