| How Codex Threatens Your Rights
Since 1996, Dr. Rath has led the charge against the United Nation's
"Codex Alimentarius" legislation, which would ban health
statements and natural therapies in relation to vitamins on a worldwide
scale. Codex is a direct threat against the Dietary Supplement Health
and Education Act (DSHEA), which protects the right of every American
to access dietary supplements.
On the surface, Codex is a UN standards system to govern food to
ensure “fair trade” and global health standards for
fruits, meats, wines and other foods sold from country-to-country.
But regulations governing dietary supplements and other natural
health alternatives would gut consumers’ ability to make well-informed
purchases of alternative health products.
Codex guidelines were approved on July 5, 2005. The threat that
Codex poses to the world’s health – and its importance
to the pharmaceutical industry’s profits – was outlined
in this article by Paul Anthony Taylor.
The Growing Threats to DSHEA
By Paul Anthony Taylor
The passage of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA)
in the United States in 1994 was arguably the single most important
legislative development in the history of health freedom. (1) Since
1994, interest in natural healthcare therapies has grown dramatically
in the United States to the point where it is now estimated that
70 percent of the US population uses dietary supplements at least
occasionally, and 40 percent use them on a regular basis. (2) Nevertheless,
and as the information in this booklet will demonstrate, there are
now numerous threats to DSHEA from a wide variety of sources.
Can Supplements Be Banned Under DSHEA?
Under DSHEA, the FDA has the power to seize any dietary supplement
that it considers poses an "unreasonable or significant risk
of illness or injury." (3) Given, therefore, that what constitutes
an “unreasonable or significant risk of illness or injury"
is not actually defined in DSHEA, it can easily be seen that this
phrase is potentially open to a wide variety of different interpretations.
Moreover, DSHEA also allows the FDA to prescribe, via the issuing
of regulations, good manufacturing practices for dietary supplements
and to remove from the market any dietary supplements that it considers
do not meet these. (4) In this respect, it should be noted that
on March 7, 2003 , the FDA issued a proposed rule, “ Current
Good Manufacturing Practice in Manufacturing, Packing, or Holding
Dietary Ingredients and Dietary Supplements” (5) , in which
the standards outlined are so severe they actually exceed those
imposed upon the pharmaceutical industry. Were these proposals to
be passed into law, many smaller companies could potentially find
the requirements to be so prohibitively expensive that they might
be forced to cease business.
Clearly, therefore, the FDA already has more power under DSHEA
than is commonly realized. Moreover, all it needs in order to wield
this power is sufficient excuse. Indeed, and as we shall examine
next, this “excuse” may now have presented itself in
the form of the Codex “Draft Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral
Food Supplements.”
The Codex Alimentarius Commission
The Codex Alimentarius Commission is the international body charged
with setting global food standards, and is jointly sponsored by
the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the
World Health Organization (WHO). Codex Alimentarius literally means
"food code," and the Commission was established in 1963
following resolutions passed at the Eleventh Session of the Conference
of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in
1961 and at the Sixteenth World Health Assembly in 1963. (6)
The legal basis for enforcement of the food standards and guidelines
created by Codex comes from the “Agreement on the Application
of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures” (SPS Agreement) (7)
and the “Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade” (TBT
Agreement) (8). Both the SPS Agreement and the TBT Agreement were
included among the Multilateral Agreements on Trade in Goods, which
was annexed to the 1994 Marrakesh Agreement that established the
World Trade Organization (WTO). (9) Although Codex standards and
guidelines are theoretically voluntary, the WTO uses them as a means
of resolving international trade disputes (10), and WTO Members
are legally obliged to abide by WTO rulings. (11)
There are currently a total of 27 different active Codex committees
and Task Forces (12); each one of which is tasked by the Codex Alimentarius
Commission to set standards and guidelines for different aspects
of the global food trade. For example, Codex committees are currently
engaged in the act of setting global standards for foods, including
fruits and vegetables; fruit and vegetable juices; fats and oils;
meat and poultry; fish; cereals, pulses and legumes; milk and milk
products; natural mineral waters; sugars; cocoa products and chocolate,
among others. Similarly, there are other Codex committees tasked
to deal with areas such as food hygiene, food labelling, pesticide
residues, residues of veterinary drugs found in foods, food additives,
regional coordination work, and so on.
Of all of these committees, it is the work of the Codex Committee
on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary Uses that is arguably
among the most controversial of all, as it has recently completed
work on a set of guidelines to govern the sale of food supplements.
These guidelines, known as the Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral
Food Supplements (13), were subsequently adopted at a meeting of
the Codex Alimentarius Commission that took place in Rome from July
4-9, 2005 (14), and, as a result, restrictions along the lines of
those contained in the European Union’s “Food Supplements
Directive” (15) could, in time, be adopted by all countries
that are members of the World Trade Organization.
The European Union’s Food Supplements Directive, the blueprint
for the Draft Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements,
was passed by the European Parliament on March 13, 2002. Fully implemented
across the European Union from August 1, 2005, it could, by the
end of 2009, have the effect of prohibiting around 300 nutrient
sources and an estimated 5,000 products from the UK alone (16, 17).
The text of the Codex Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements
bears some notable resemblances to that of the Food Supplements
Directive, thus raising the possibility that its eventual global
effect could, in time, be similarly restrictive.
Are Countries Obliged to Implement Codex Standards and Guidelines?
A great deal of discussion is currently taking place within the
natural products industry, both in the United States and elsewhere,
as to whether or not countries are actually obliged to adopt Codex
standards and guidelines.
In fact, it is arguably true that there is no single categoric
obligation for governments to adopt Codex standards and guidelines.
However, the preamble to the SPS Agreement (to which all WTO Members
are signatories) specifically mentions Codex and states that WTO
Members (and hence all SPS signatories) desire “to further
the use of harmonized sanitary and phytosanitary measures between
Members on the basis of international standards, guidelines and
recommendations developed by the relevant international organizations,
including the Codex Alimentarius Commission.” (18)
Article 3.1 of the Agreement goes even further than this, however,
and states, “ To harmonize sanitary and phytosanitary measures
on as wide a basis as possible, Members shall base their sanitary
or phytosanitary measures on international standards, guidelines
or recommendations, where they exist. ” (19)
The key word here, from a legal perspective, would appear to be
“shall”; the use of which could arguably be said to
make the Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements mandatory
for all WTO member countries.
However, even if a country decides not to use a Codex standard,
the measure that it operates in place of that standard remains subject
to a range of conditions set out in detail in Article 5 of the SPS
Agreement. In relation to dietary supplements, one of the most important
of these conditions would appear to be a requirement to take into
account risk assessment techniques developed by “the relevant
international organizations.” (20) Essentially then, even
in the event of a country choosing not to implement the Guidelines
for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements, the legislation that it
chooses to implement instead could still remain subject to Codex
risk assessment guidelines, as the Codex Alimentarius Commission
is listed as one of the “relevant international organizations”
in the preamble to the SPS Agreement. (21) Significantly, therefore,
guidelines on risk analysis are already under discussion at meetings
of the Codex Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special Dietary
Uses (22) , and the committee has recently indicated that this work
will be concentrating upon “the development of methodological
aspects for over dosage of nutrients.” (23)
In addition, one could even argue a case that countries were already
expected to adopt Codex standards before either the WTO or the SPS
Agreement came into existence on the grounds that, in 1985, a UN
General Assembly resolution gave rise to the United Nations “Guidelines
for Consumer Protection” (24, 25). These guidelines stated
that "Governments should take into account the need of all
consumers for food security and should support and, as far as possible,
adopt standards from the...Codex Alimentarius.” (25) To be
fair, however, it could also be said that the use of the word “should”
in this text, as opposed to the word “shall,” could
arguably be said to amount to something less than a mandatory requirement.
Nevertheless, the United Nations Guidelines for Consumer Protection
were later expanded in 1999 and the reference to Codex was retained.
(26)
Recent developments make the issue of “adoption” somewhat
more academic, however, as the Codex Alimentarius Commission has
recently deleted the notification and acceptance procedures from
the Codex Procedural Manual. (27) Prior to this, there had been
three levels of acceptance for Codex texts (28) , and countries
were, theoretically, supposed to inform the Codex Alimentarius Commission
of which level of acceptance they would be applying to each individual
Codex standard within its territorial jurisdiction. Clearly, therefore,
although in practice the notification and acceptance procedures
had effectively been ignored by governments for some years, the
fact that they have now been abolished provides still further evidence
that in light of the SPS Agreement, compliance with Codex standards
and guidelines is effectively assumed to be mandatory. (29)
Finally, it should be noted that the text of the Codex Guidelines
for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements specifically states in
paragraph 1.2 that "These Guidelines do apply in those jurisdictions
where products defined in 2.1 [i.e. vitamin and mineral food supplements]
are regulated as foods." (30) (Emphasis added.) As such, given
that the United States regulates dietary supplements as foods, it
seems clear that the guidelines will indeed apply there.
In summary therefore, the numerous coercions for governments to
adopt Codex texts appear to be such that they leave little option
but to comply.
The Codex Secretariat Claims That Codex Texts Are “Not
Mandatory” (31, 32)
The official reports that are released following Codex meetings
are not always strictly accurate and frequently do not reflect either
the discussions that took place or the manner in which things were
“decided.” Moreover, some important discussions that
take place during the meeting are not even mentioned in the report.
The National Health Federation (NHF), for example, that is the
only consistently pro-health freedom, non-governmental organization
attending Codex, specifically requested during the November 2004
meeting of the Codex Committee on Nutrition and Foods for Special
Dietary Uses (CCNFSDU) that it should be stated either in the text
of the Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements or in
the Committee’s report whether or not it was mandatory for
countries to implement the guidelines. Dr. Jeronimas Maskeliunas,
Food Standards Officer for the Joint FAO/WHO Food Standards Programme,
answered the NHF’s question on behalf of the Codex Secretariat
and stated that all documents that the Committee was elaborating
on were "not mandatory." He also stated, "member
countries decide how to use them." The NHF, therefore, requested
that this should be stated in the report.
When the draft report was distributed on the final day of the
meeting, however, there was no mention to be found in it of either
the NHF’s question or Dr. Maskeliunas’ answer. The NHF,
therefore, raised this with the chairman of the committee, Dr. Rolf
Grossklaus, and made repeated requests to him to include mention
of this important issue in the official report to be released following
the meeting. Nevertheless, Dr. Grossklaus refused to allow this,
saying that it was not mandatory for him to heed such requests.
As far as the official report of this meeting is concerned, therefore,
it is as if this vital matter had not even been discussed.
As a result, we are forced to ask why, if the Guidelines for Vitamin
and Mineral Food Supplements are not mandatory as the Codex Secretariat
claimed, was Dr. Grossklaus so opposed to this being stated in the
committee’s report?
By way of contrast, however, the Codex Alimentarius Commission
itself appears to be in no doubt that countries are indeed required
to base their domestic regulations on Codex standards, as demonstrated
by the following extract from one of the official documents issued
at the Commission’s meeting in Geneva in 2004:
Members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are REQUIRED to
base their domestic technical regulations or standards on standards
developed by international organizations. These organizations include
the Joint FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission for food safety;
the Office International des Epizooties (OIE) for animal health;
and the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) for plant
health. (33) (EMPHASIS ADDED).
Moreover, and as we shall examine next, the Codex Alimentarius
Commission is not the only group that appears to see the implementation
of Codex texts as mandatory.
Does the FDA See the Implementation of Codex Texts as Mandatory?
Seemingly unbeknownst to many people in the natural products industry,
the FDA has already acknowledged that the United States is obliged
to implement Codex standards, codes, and guidelines under international
agreements. Michael A. Friedman, M.D., for example, a former Acting
Deputy Commissioner for Operations in the Department of Health and
Human Services , spoke before the Committee on Labor and Human Resources
in the U.S. Senate on March 19, 1997 and stated the following:
|
FDA has been
a strong supporter of, and participant in, the Codex Alimentarius
Commission (Codex). Codex is an international standards-setting
organization for food safety composed of national governments
from more than 150 countries. The work of Codex is increasingly
important with the recognition of Codex as the relevant international
standards-setting body for food safety in the Agreement on
the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS)
resulting from the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations.
Since its inception, Codex has developed in excess of 200
Commodity Standards, more than 40 codes and guidelines, about
2,500 pesticide/commodity maximum limits, and has reviewed
the safety of over 500 food additives and contaminants. FDA,
through its participation on most Codex Committees, provides
scientific and regulatory expertise and forcefully presents
U.S. views at the committee meetings.
FDA plans
to amend its regulations and procedures for consideration
of standards adopted by Codex. This action is being taken
to provide for the systematic review of the Codex Standards
in order to enhance consumer protection, promote international
harmonization, and fulfill obligations of the United States
under international agreements. (34)
Statement
by Michael A. Friedman, M.D.
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This statement is then further reinforced by the FDA on a webpage
dealing with international harmonization, which states:
The harmonization
of laws, regulations, and standards between and among trading
partners requires intense, complex, time-consuming negotiations
by CFSAN officials. Harmonization must simultaneously facilitate
international trade and promote mutual understanding, while
protecting national interests and establish a basis to resolve
food issues on sound scientific evidence in an objective atmosphere.
Failure to reach a consistent, harmonized set of laws, regulations
and standards within the free trade agreements and the World
Trade Organization Agreements can result in considerable economic
repercussions (35).
U.S.
Food and Drug Administration |
Moreover, the United States Federal Register of October 11, 1995
, specifically describes the FDA’s policy on the development
and use of standards with respect to the international harmonization
of regulatory requirements and guidelines and states, "where
a relevant international standard exists, or completion is imminent,
it will generally be used in preference to a domestic standard..."
(36)
As such, therefore, although the FDA has recently claimed that
the Codex Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements will
not place pressure on the US to alter DSHEA (37), it is clear that
many of its other public statements are at odds with this assertion.
The World Trade Organization
As discussed earlier, the World Trade Organization (WTO) uses
Codex texts as a means of resolving international trade disputes
(10), and WTO Members are legally obliged to abide by WTO rulings.
(11)
The net result of this is now that the Codex Guidelines on Vitamin
and Mineral Food Supplements have been adopted by the Codex Alimentarius
Commission, any WTO member country producing vitamin and mineral
supplements that conform to these new global standards can theoretically
file a complaint with the WTO whenever another member country refuses
to allow their goods to be imported and sold within its borders.
In the process of resolving such a dispute, the WTO Dispute Settlement
Body would refer to the Codex Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral
Food Supplements and find in favor of the country that was acting
in conformity with them.
The losing country could then be forced to adopt whatever requirements
the WTO Dispute Settlement Body decided upon, which could include
changing its domestic laws. If a country failed to adopt these requirements,
however, it could then become subject to punitive economic sanctions.
(38)
As such, there now exists a very real risk that Codex restrictions
upon the manufacture and sale of vitamin and mineral supplements
could, in the future, be quite literally forced upon the United
States via the WTO.
So how might this happen?
According to some observers, the most likely scenario to occur
would be one where a trade dispute against the United States was
triggered by the FDA refusing to allow a foreign manufacturer to
export a vitamin and/or mineral supplement containing what the FDA
regarded to be a “New Dietary Ingredient.”
Under DSHEA, the FDA has the power to prevent a “New Dietary
Ingredient” from being sold in the United States if it considers
that it has not received sufficient safety data in advance. (39)
The term “New Dietary Ingredient” is defined in DSHEA
as being “a dietary ingredient that was not marketed in the
United States before October 15, 1994.” Clearly, therefore,
this clause could allow the FDA to block such a product from entering
the US, potentially triggering a trade dispute. Although a trade
dispute that forced the US to accept a new dietary ingredient could
also be arguably seen as a positive step (so long as the new ingredient
was safe), the danger is that in ruling against the US, the WTO
would also have the power to force it to alter DSHEA.
An alternative scenario, meanwhile, could be one where a country
whose market was fully compliant with the restrictive Codex Guidelines
for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements brought a trade dispute
against the United States under article 5.4 of the SPS Agreement,
which states that “Members should, when determining the appropriate
level of sanitary or phytosanitary protection, take into account
the objective of minimizing negative trade effects.” (40)
In such a situation a country might argue, for example, that DSHEA
has the effect of causing negative trade effects, in that the higher-dose
products available in the US are acting as a disincentive for US
consumers to purchase lower-dose (read: safer) products produced
by Codex-compliant countries.
In addition, and given that the Codex Guidelines for Vitamin and
Mineral Food Supplements call for upper safe levels to be set for
vitamin and mineral supplements (41), it can easily be seen that
in any trade dispute high-dose products that were not in conformity
with the guidelines could potentially be viewed by the WTO Dispute
Settlement Body as being unsafe and, hence, in contravention of
article 5.1 of the SPS Agreement:
5.1. Members
shall ensure that their sanitary or phytosanitary measures are
based on an assessment, as appropriate to the circumstances,
of the risks to human, animal or plant life or health, taking
into account risk assessment techniques developed by the relevant
international organizations. (42)
SPS
Agreement |
Furthermore, once the Codex Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral
Food Supplements start to “bite” globally, US manufacturers
could find themselves in a position where they had to market two
sets of products; one set of higher-dose products for the US market
and a second set of lower-dose products for export. As such, it
could then be possible for a Codex-compliant country to argue that
by applying different upper limits to vitamin and mineral supplements
sold internally compared to those exported abroad, the US was effectively
making unjustifiable distinctions in the level of risk it applied
to different situations. If this charge were proven, the US would
then be in clear contravention of article 5.5 of the SPS Agreement,
which states:
5.5
With the objective of achieving consistency in the application
of the concept of appropriate level of sanitary or phytosanitary
protection against risks to human life or health, or to animal
and plant life or health, each Member shall avoid arbitrary
or unjustifiable distinctions in the levels it considers to
be appropriate in different situations, if such distinctions
result in discrimination or a disguised restriction on international
trade. (43)
SPS
Agreement |
Again then, and as with the previous example, the higher-dose products
available in the US would effectively be acting as a disincentive
for US consumers to purchase lower-dose products produced by Codex-compliant
countries, thus producing a disguised restriction on international
trade.
In reality, however, most trade disputes at the WTO are brought
on several grounds simultaneously, rather than on one single ground
alone. (44) As such, it is quite possible that any future trade
dispute involving dietary supplements could be brought against the
United States on several of the above grounds.
Finally, it should be noted that the WTO would allow trade sanctions
to be imposed upon the US dietary supplement sector even when a
trade dispute has nothing to do with dietary supplements. Such an
eventuality is outlined on the WTO website as follows:
If the country
that is the target of the complaint loses, it must follow
the recommendations of the panel report or the appeals report.
It must state its intention to do so at a Dispute Settlement
Body meeting held within 30 days of the report’s adoption.
If complying with the recommendation immediately proves impractical,
the member will be given a “reasonable period of time”
to do so. If it fails to act within this period, it has to
enter into negotiations with the complaining country (or countries)
in order to determine mutually acceptable compensation —
for instance, tariff reductions in areas of particular interest
to the complaining side.
If after 20
days, no satisfactory compensation is agreed, the complaining
side may ask the Dispute Settlement Body for permission to
impose limited trade sanctions (“suspend concessions
or obligations”) against the other side. The Dispute
Settlement Body must grant this authorization within 30 days
of the expiry of the “reasonable period of time”
unless there is a consensus against the request.
In principle,
the sanctions should be imposed in the same sector as the
dispute. If this is not practical or if it would not be effective,
the sanctions can be imposed in a different sector of the
same agreement. In turn, if this is not effective or practicable
and if the circumstances are serious enough, the action can
be taken under another agreement. The objective is to minimize
the chances of actions spilling over into unrelated sectors
while at the same time allowing the actions to be effective.
(45)
World
Trade Organization
|
Potentially therefore, if, say, the US lost a trade dispute involving
regular food products, for example, then the complaining country
could ask the WTO Dispute Settlement Body for permission to impose
trade sanctions against the US dietary supplement sector. While
this would not in itself lead to DSHEA being amended, of course,
it could perhaps result in increased political pressure, both in
the US and internationally, to harmonize DSHEA to Codex standards.
The FAO/WHO Nutrient Risk Assessment Project
The Guidelines
for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements state that the upper
safe levels for vitamins and minerals will be established via scientific
risk assessment. (46) In this respect, it is probably no coincidence,
therefore, that in September 2004, the Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) of the United Nations and the World Health Organization (WHO)
announced plans for a joint nutrient risk assessment project, the
goal of which is described as follows:
…
to define a scientifically based and internationally applicable
approach for nutrient risk assessment. Such work will provide
scientific advice on the principles and methodologies to be
used in conducting risk assessment for nutrients and related
substances. A key task is the convening of an interdisciplinary
technical workshop to specifically develop a model for risk
assessment for nutrients and related substances. (47)
Nutrient
Risk Assessment Project |
Because the FAO and the WHO are the joint administrators of the
Codex Alimentarius Commission, the results of their nutrient risk
assessment project are expected to be very influential upon the
maximum levels to be recommended by Codex in connection with the
Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements.
Worryingly, therefore, the references and annex sections of the
background paper published by the FAO/WHO when the project was announced
tend to suggest that the published Opinions of the European Commission
Scientific Committee on Food (SCF) will in turn also be influential
upon the outcome of the project. (48) This does nothing to inspire
confidence in the venture, however, as many of the SCF’s published
Opinions run completely contrary to not only the principles of Cellular
Medicine, but also to common sense itself. The SCF’s Opinion
on vitamin B3, for example, suggests that the upper safe level for
niacin should be set at only 10 milligrams, an amount that is just
over half of the EU RDA. (49)
Clearly, therefore, we must view the FAO/WHO nutrient risk assessment
project with healthy doses of both suspicion and skepticism.
The Free Trade Area of the Americas
The groundwork for the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA)
was set in 1994, when leaders from the U.S., Latin America , Canada
, and the Caribbean met at the First
Summit of the Americas in Miami. (50).
Although the ultimate goal of the FTAA negotiationsis officially
described as being to “achieve an area of free trade and regional
integration” (51) , the recent evidence of the European Union
(EU) project shows that this can only be achieved via the dismantling
of the political and legal systems of participating nations and
the replacing of these with a hemispheric government. In essence,
therefore, this is why many observers see the FTAA as an embryonic
EU in the making. (52)
As such, and in exactly the same way as the relatively liberal
dietary supplement laws of the UK were overridden by the EU Food
Supplements Directive (as a result of successive treaties that the
British Government had signed with its European neighbors), fears
are now being raised among the US health freedom movement that participation
in the FTAA could similarly lead to US dietary supplement law (i.e.
DSHEA) becoming susceptible to harmonization with the more restrictive
laws of South American countries such as Brazil.
The text of the FTAA agreement has gone through several revisions
since its inception. The current draft is the third of the series
and, like the SPS Agreement, it shows quite clearly that FTAA Members
will be subject to the harmonized standards, guidelines, and recommendations
of the “relevant international organizations”:
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[Article 19. Harmonization]
[19.1. The Parties shall endeavor to work together in the framework
of the regional and sub-regional sanitary and phytosanitary organizations
that exist in the Hemisphere in order to develop harmonized sanitary
and phytosanitary standards, guidelines, and recommendations. Likewise,
the Parties shall submit the harmonized standards, guidelines, and
recommendations for consideration by the corresponding international
organizations, as necessary.]
[19.1. The Parties will work together in the framework of the
regional and sub- regional sanitary and phytosanitary organizations
that exist in the Hemisphere in order to establish, recognize, and
apply common sanitary measures. Likewise, the Parties shall submit
the harmonized sanitary and phytosanitary measures for consideration
by the corresponding international organizations, as necessary.]
[19.2. The Parties agree to collaborate in monitoring, at the
hemispheric level, the process of international harmonization as
established by the Committee on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
of the WTO.]
[Article 20. Equivalence]
[20.1. The Parties agree that the general objective of equivalence
agreements shall be to promote increased mutual trust and cooperation
between national sanitary and phytosanitary authorities and thereby
to facilitate trade and to efficiently attain the importer’s
country appropriate level of protection.]
[20.2. To that effect, the Parties [undertake to abide by][take
note of] the Decision on the Implementation of Article 4 of the
WTO Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
adopted by the WTO SPS Committee (WTO/G/SPS/19 and WTO/G/SPS/19/Add.1)
and the guidelines on equivalence that are established by Relevant
International Bodies recognized by the WTO Agreement on the Application
of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures.] (53)
Free
Trade Area of the Americas - Draft Agreement
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As can be seen, the parallels between parts of the above excerpt
and the equivalent sections of the SPS Agreement (54) are quite
striking. Indeed, given the references to the WTO and the SPS Agreement,
along with the use of phrases such as “Relevant International
Bodies” (that as we have already seen refers to the Codex
Alimentarius Commission, among others), we are forced to consider
whether participation in the FTAA could be the very mechanism by
which the US is eventually forced to harmonize DSHEA to the more
restrictive laws of its South American neighbors.
In this respect, it is particularly sobering to note, therefore,
that FTAA participant countries, including Bolivia, Brazil, Canada,
Chile, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Venezuela all sent delegations to
the November 2004 meeting of the Codex Committee on Nutrition and
Foods for Special Dietary Usesthat took place in Bonn, Germany,
and none of them spoke out even remotely in favor of health freedom.
(55)
Moreover, comments submitted by Brazil before the November 2003
meeting of this committee stated that they were opposed to a “without-control-consumption
by consumers”; that supplements should not contain more than
100% of the RDA for any nutrient; and that there is no evidence
of benefit from ingesting amounts above the RDA. (56) Interestingly,
therefore, the final phase of the FTAA negotiations will be guided
by the co-chairmanship of Brazil and the United States . (57)
Finally, many observers believe that the Central American Free Trade
Agreement (CAFTA) (58) makes the progression to FTAA almost inevitable.
CAFTA extends the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) (59)
to Central America and, as such, can arguably be seen as a stepping-stone
towards FTAA and the creation of a hemispheric government for the
American continent.
Who Is Interested in Amending DSHEA?
Naturally occurring forms of nutrients and herbs cannot be patented,
and, as such, given their safety and effectiveness in the prevention
and treatment of disease, dietary supplements represent a serious
and growing threat to the multi-trillion dollar pharmaceutical industry,
the profitability of which depends upon the sale of patented synthetic
drugs. Undoubtedly, therefore, it can be seen that the pharmaceutical
industry has a clear vested interest in DSHEA being amended restrictively.
As a result of its efforts to defend and promote its drug market,
the pharmaceutical industry’s tentacles of influence now reach
right to the heart of most governments in the developed world. Drug
companies now openly court influence on Capital Hill, for example,
and provide corporate jets for senators at cut-down prices, donations
to political committees, funding for think tanks, and contributions
to politicians’ election expenses. (60)
In fact, pharmaceutical companies and their representatives contributed
at least $17 million to federal candidates in last year's US elections,
including nearly $1 million to President Bush alone. Moreover, it
has been estimated that since 1998 drug companies have spent $758
million on lobbying in the United States; an amount that is more
than that of any other industry. (61)
The pharmaceutical industry now has a total of 1,274 lobbyists
in Washington ; a number that works out at more than two for every
single member of Congress. Of these lobbyists, it turns out that
476, almost 40 percent, are former federal officials, while 40 are
actually former members of Congress. (62). In addition, a "revolving
door" essentially operates at key US regulatory agencies like
the FDA, where regulators become pharmaceutical executives and vice
versa.
Globally, the situation is even worse, and new international regulations,
such as those affecting dietary supplements, are now increasingly
being planned in private between big business and bureaucrats. Once
business interests have agreed to these templates, they are subsequently
drawn up as new international standards or guidelines at venues
such as Codex. (63) Significantly, therefore, attendees at key Codex
meetings often include representatives of the pharmaceutical industry;
some of who sit on national delegations alongside regulators and
other official government representatives.
Clearly then, the influence of the pharmaceutical industry arguably
represents the single biggest threat to DSHEA. Moreover, drug companies
clearly have the most to gain if DSHEA were to be amended restrictively,
and, conversely, the most to lose if it were not.
Conclusion
As we have seen, there are now a wide variety of forces at play,
which together could, in time, potentially conspire to dismantle
DSHEA. While some would argue, of course, that the vigorous and
non-partisan campaign that was mounted in order to enact DSHEA continues
to act as a disincentive for any administration that might wish
to dismantle it, we should remember that the situation on Capital
Hill itself has changed significantly since 1994.
For example, as of May 2004, only 50 percent of the members of
the U.S. House and Senate were in office when DSHEA was passed in
1994, and there has also been an 80 percent turnover in legislative
staff since that time. (64) Following the US elections of November
2004, therefore, we can only but guess what the new numbers might
be.
As such, US consumers and consumer groups must now urgently restart
the process of educating legislators and legislative staff about
the safety and effectiveness of dietary supplements, as those who
oppose consumer access to these products are likely to seize on
the adoption of the Codex Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food
Supplements as a reason for dismantling DSHEA.
The S. 722 (65), H.R. 3377 (66) and S. 1538 (67) bills that were
proposed during the Bush administration’s first term serve
as a grim reminder that there are now forces within the US Government
who would like to see DSHEA amended at the earliest opportunity.
Although none of these bills picked up enough Congressional support
to be enacted during the Bush administration’s first term,
similar bills are already being introduced during its second term,
each of which presents a separate threat to DSHEA.
H.R. 3156, for example, would severely and negatively impact upon
DSHEA by giving the FDA the authority to ban any dietary supplement
or dietary ingredient from the market if it failed an unreasonable
and arbitrary risk/benefit assessment. (68)
S. 729/H.R. 1507, meanwhile, would create a new federal food safety
agency and undermine DSHEA by leaving supplements to be regulated
by a newly formed drug administration. (69, 70)
Another dangerous bill, H.R. 2485, would give the FDA an extra $205
million between now and 2010 to regulate dietary supplements on
the dubious grounds that it has not adequately used its authority
to enforce DSHEA due to a lack of resources. (71) H.R. 2510, a similar
proposal, would also appropriate more money to the FDA. (72)
Clearly, while some Americans appear to believe that the passing
of DSHEA won the health freedom war in America , history may yet
turn out to show that it was merely one battle along the way. Moreover,
and as at least one American health freedom commentator has stated
recently, there is currently too much conflict among people who
should be working together to solve the Codex problem and, as a
result, the American people are not yet ready to fight again for
their health freedoms. (73)
As to whether DSHEA will eventually be overturned or amended,
only time, and the willingness of consumers and consumer organizations
to recognize the various threats and act together to defend it against
them, will tell.
Let us hope then that an overall sense of unity will soon prevail
in the American health freedom movement. The passing of DSHEA was
a milestone in the history of health freedom, but health-conscious
Americans will henceforth need to be increasingly vigilant in the
future in order to ensure that their hard-won victory is not in
vain.
© Paul Anthony Taylor
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