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OTTAWA, Oct. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- Health ministers and
experts from 30 countries on Monday gathered here to discuss measures to ward
off a wider spread of the bird flu virus, which experts fear might mutate into a
deadly human pandemic.
Canada has stepped up its pandemic preparations with
stockpiles of the coveted anti-flu Tamiflu and an action plan for provincial and
federal health officials.
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Canadian Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh
(Front 2nd R) speaks at the start of a two-day health conference in Ottawa
Oct. 24.
(Reuters) | Canadian
Prime Minister Paul Martin called for rich nations to give a hand to developing
countries and share with them anti-virus plans, influenza testing and drugs that
may ward off the infectionof the H5N1 strain, which has already killed over 60
in Asia.
"We are doing well as a country and we are ahead of
most, but we also have a lot of work to do before we can be satisfied in
Canada," Martin said.
"But the fundamental issue is that no single country
can handle this problem in isolation. The world has to come together and thatis
what this meeting is all about," said the prime minister.
World Health Organization Director-General Lee
Jong-Wook said that delegates to the conference will consider a Mexican proposal
for wealthy nations to give out 10 percent of their stocks of Tamiflu and other
potential drugs to developing countries.
"It makes a lot of sense to try and put out the fire
out there, rather than waiting for this wave to reach you," Lee said.
At the two-day conference, health experts will also
discuss the controversial issue whether the patent of Tamiflu held by
Switzerland's Roche AG should be used by other pharmaceutical companies.
"A suggestion that's being made by some countries is
that the reare countries that have the capacity to manufacture the vaccine, that
we actually need to assist them with technology transfers," Canadian Health
Minister Ujjal Dosanjh told reporters on Monday.
The World Trade Organization in 2003 gave permissions
to governments to override patents during health crises. Enditem
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