Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05ANKARA939
2005-02-18 14:10:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Ankara
Cable title:  

TURKEY: DATA EXCLUSIVITY DEMARCHE TO MFA

Tags:  ETRD KIPR TU 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS ANKARA 000939 

SIPDIS

USTR FOR LERRION/BPECK
USEU FOR CHRIS WILSON
USPTO FOR ELAINE WU
USDOC FOR ITA/MAC/DEFALCO

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ETRD KIPR TU
SUBJECT: TURKEY: DATA EXCLUSIVITY DEMARCHE TO MFA

REF: A. ANKARA 839, B. STATE 19340

SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED.

UNCLAS ANKARA 000939

SIPDIS

USTR FOR LERRION/BPECK
USEU FOR CHRIS WILSON
USPTO FOR ELAINE WU
USDOC FOR ITA/MAC/DEFALCO

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ETRD KIPR TU
SUBJECT: TURKEY: DATA EXCLUSIVITY DEMARCHE TO MFA

REF: A. ANKARA 839, B. STATE 19340

SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED.


1. (SBU) Following-up on our meetings with the Health
Ministry and Foreign Trade Under Secretariat (ref A),
DCM made ref B demarche to MFA Director General for the
Americas Selhattin Alpar on February 18. The DCM
highlighted the important role intellectual property
issues have played in our bilateral relationship and
welcomed the progress represented by new Turkish
regulations protecting data exclusivity. Drawing on
the points in ref B, the DCM noted the loopholes that
undermined the effectiveness of the new regulation and
the potential implications for, among other things,
investment.


2. (SBU) Alpar offered no information in addition to
that reported in ref A. He asked for U.S.
understanding of the progress that Turkey has made in
improving its intellectual property regime, as well as
for the difficulties this had entailed. He said
Turkey's goal was to have in place an IP regime that
afforded the same protections as those in the U.S. and
EU. He hoped that any deficiencies in current
legislation would have a limited commercial impact and
would, in time, be overcome and noted that foreign
companies have access to Turkey's judicial system in
the meantime. Alpar added that any shortcomings in
regulations were not aimed at any particular foreign
company, but reflected the "social, legal, and
budgetary" difficulties inherent in the creation of a
modern IP regime. He asked that the U.S. government
encourage joint ventures between U.S. and Turkish
pharmaceutical companies to facilitate, presumably,
their adaptation to such a modern IP environment.


3. (SBU) Post Comment: The new data exclusivity
regulations are the most progress we have seen in
post's years of work on the data exclusivity issue. At
the same time, we cannot hold out much hope that the
remaining deficiencies regarding data protection will
be corrected in the near term. We will, however,
continue to advocate aggressively on this issue -- as
we did in a separate February 18 meeting with the
Foreign Trade Under Secretariat's DG for EU Affairs --
and will provide additional commentary for the Special
301 review.

EDELMAN