Memorial For The Tehankee Center For The Law Moot Court Competition
Memorial For The Tehankee Center For The Law Moot Court Competition
Memorial For The Tehankee Center For The Law Moot Court Competition
MEMORIAL FOR THE TEHANKEE CENTER FOR THE LAW MOOT COURT
COMPETITION
REPUBLIC OF AYASA
APPLICANT
1
D. RAMIGO DID NOT COMMIT AN INTERNATIONALLY WRONGFUL
ACT………………………………………………………………………………….20
ATTRIBUTABLE TO RAMIGO……………………………………………....20
ECONOMIC MATTERS…………………………………………………...21
BY RAMIGO………………………………………………………………...22
ATTRIBUTABLE TO AYASA……………………………………………23
WRONGFUL ACTS………………………………………………………..24
OF POSSESSION………………………………………………………..…24
VALIDITY………………………………………………………………….25
ATTRIBUTABLE TO RAMIGO………………………………………………….27
AGREEMENT……………………………………………………………………...28
3
D. AYASA VIOLATED THE PARIS CONVENTION FOR FAILURE TO
4
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
ARTICLES
Ian Brownlie, Principles of Public International Law (7th ed. Oxford University Press, Oxford
2008)……. ................................................................................................................................... ..17
José Martinez Cobo, “Study of the Problem of Discrimination Against Indigenous
Populations”…………. ................................................................................................................. 31
Lere Amusan, “Politics Of Biopiracy: An Adventure Into Hoodia/Xhoba Patenting In Southern
Africa”……………………………………………………………………………………………41
Fariba Assadi-Porter. “How Sweet It Is: Detailed Molecular and Functional Studies of Brazzein,
a Sweet Protein and Its Analogs.”…………………………………………..................................42
Giovannini P, Reyes-García V, Waldstein A, Heinrich M. Do pharmaceuticals displace local
knowledge and use of medicinal plants?………………………………………….......................42
Ajeet Mathur. Who Owns Traditional Knowledge?……………………………………………..43
T. Cattier and M. Panizzon, hgal Perspectives on Traditional Knowledge…………...................46
Emilio Agustín Maffezini v. The Kingdom of Spain, ICSID Case No. ARB/97/7 ………..……21
Mayagna Awas Tingni Community v. Nicaragua; Judgment of Aug.31, 2001 ………..….........24
Case Concerning the United States Diplomatic and Consular Staff in Tehran, 24 May 1980, ICJ
Reports (1980)…………………………………………………………………………………...26
Samaraka v. Suriname, IACHR Series C No 185………………………………………………..28
Moiwana Community v. Suriname, Judgment of June 15, 2005…………………………….28, 29
Ogoni v. Nigeria, Communication No.155/96, 27 May 2002, African Commission on Human
and People’s Rights ……………………………………………………………………………...29
5
Mayagna (Sumo) Awas Tingni Community v. Nicaragua ……………………………………...33
Apirana Mahuika et al. v. New Zealand………………… …………………………...................34
6
Scott Holwick, Developing Nations and the Agreement On Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual
Property Rights…………………………………………………………......................................48
Carlos M Correa, “Traditional Knowledge and intellectual property”………..............................49
MISCELLANEOUS
Compromis………………………………………………………………………………………18,
19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 33, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 50
7
STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
Ayasa and the Confederation of Ramigian Nations [“the Parties”], and in pursuant to Article 40
(1) of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, the Parties hereby submit to this Court
their dispute concerning questions relating to the harvest and processing of purahuaca and the
In accordance with Article 3 of the Special Agreement, the International Court of Justice
is hereby requested to adjudge the dispute on the basis of the rules and principles of general
international law, as well as any applicable treaties. The Court is also requested to determine the
legal consequences, including the rights and obligations of the Parties, arising from its Judgment
on the questions presented. The Parties have agreed to accept any Judgment of the Court as final
and binding upon them and shall execute it in its entirety and in good faith.
8
QUESTIONS PRESENTED
I.
II.
III.
IV.
9
STATEMENT OF FACTS
BACKGROUND
The Republic of Ayasa (Ayasa) occupies the western half of the island of Fersila, while
the Confederation of Ramigian Nations (Ramigo) is on the eastern half. Bordering them is the
Lusewa River which runs through a dense tropical rainforest named after it. The forest extends
Lusewa Forest is inaccessible to many researchers and has its abundant flora and fauna. It
is home to several mostly endangered species of bird, insect, mammals, frogs, trees, orchids and
mangroves. Thus, the rainforest was declared a protected area by both Ayasa and Ramigo under
Ayasa is a low middle income country with a unitary presidential system of government.
Its economy is largely based on agriculture. Poor farming practices have resulted in declining
soil fertility, resulting in less productive harvests and less nutritious crops.
central government with limited powers. The autonomous regions decide on their own including
infrastructure, natural resource utilization and use of allocated funds from the central
10
OMELOI AND ITS CENTURIES-OLD HUACASERA RITUAL
One of the autonomous regions is Sanagu, the ancestral domain of the Omeloi, a semi-
nomadic tribe. Omeloi customs are considered the law of the land, subject only to the
Constitution of Ramigo.
While Omeloi have started to embrace modern medicine and political participation, their
educational, technological, environmental conservation, and dispute settlement systems are still
The Omeloi highly value a tree which grows in clusters on the riverbank, locally called
purahuaca. Its taproot is brewed by the tribe elders for a communal healing and decision-making
ritual called huacasera. It includes drying and smoking of the taproot with the bark and flowers
of the tree. The tea is then brewed over a communal fire. It can cure malaria, diarrhea, and
In 2011, the Fersila started experiencing extreme weather conditions and as a result,
certain disease microbes have started mutating. One of these diseases is locally called limara, in
which a mosquito-borne parasite that causes high-fevers, vomiting, diarrhea, and in a deadly
turn, liver and brain damage within one weak if not treated.
In 2012, doctors discovered that the Omeloi had no cases of limara. The smoking ritual
drove away the mosquitoes and that the malaria-treating capabilities of purahuaca would have
cured any suffering villager. Injecting the brew killed the parasite within a week in 90% of
11
infected tissue samples. Out of respect for the Omeloi, the researchers did not patent the
formulation and declined lucrative offers from pharmaceutical companies to develop a drug.
In July 2015, during the rainy season, limara outbreak surged in Ayasa. Importation of
An agreement was negotiated but did not push forward because according to the
Ramigian Prime Minister, Aliph Reino, the tribe considered the purahuaca communal property
and the elders of the tribe were not unanimous in agreeing to harvest the tree’s roots for trade.
Ayasa bought 40% of the shared of Rylov Corporation, a pharmaceutical company, and
subsidized it to develop treatment. It was found that not only were the Ramigian samples in
themselves more potent, but it was huacasera ritual of smoking and drying with flowers and bark
Rylov researchers started to cross the river at night to pluck out purahuaca flowers and
strip the bark from the trees at the Ramigian side of the River. When caught, the researchers and
their assistants would bribe the Ramigian border guards. One of the researchers was once caught
by an Omeloi watchman. He was brought to the Council of Elders, who reprimanded him and
They Omeloi elders manifested that they understood the desperation of the Ayasans to
find a cure and allowed limited harvesting of purahuaca. The Purahuaca Harvest and Research
Arrangement (PHRA) was negotiated between them, where Omeloi allowed Ayasan people and
12
machines to enter into their land to harvest the root. But they must pay any damage caused to the
ancestral lands..
The researchers tried and grafted the Ayasan purahuaca with the branches of Ramigian
purahuaca, but the elders protested when they saw the abbreviated version, saying that it was
against tribal custom to graft plants since it would make the original plant unclean. No
community involvement and no prayers were said. Instruments used would also hurt the spirit of
Rylov researchers had invested 100 trees, 75 more than what was agreed upon in the PHR
Agreement. Feeling insulted, they told the researchers to remove personnel and equipment. The
latter refused to leave so the elders rebuked them, saying that they should pay first and plant new
Consequently in May 2017, Rylov was able to produce a drug branded as Huacaxin. They
patented both the drug and the smoking process. The drug was made commercially available.
Aneesa Wygai, a member of the Omeloi tribe who became a lawyer, found out about the
patenting of the chemical compounds used and the huacasera process and asked whether the
elders had been paid royalties. She filed a complaint in the Ayasa courts asking to nullify the
issuance of the patent and for the recovery of royalties based on the PFR Agreement, but it was
dismissed.
13
Upon receipt of the unfavorable decision, she requested from the Ramigian government
legal assistance. It was granted and Ramigo sent a note verbale to Ayasa, requesting for a
On the night of February 3, 2018, some of the Omeloi tribesmen, burnt purahuaca trees
on the Ayasan side of the border, angry that the drug was patented without recognition of their
contribution to its development and processing of the drug. The fire reached the edge of the
The border guards of Ramigo stood by claiming that they had no jurisdiction to intervene
Ramigo refused to take responsibility saying that the Omeloi people are autonomous and
that the Ramigian state did not condone as such us not an act of the state of Ramigo but only of
Ramigo argues that there was an agreement for the proper use of Ramigo’s natural
Unable to come up with an acceptable solution to the concern of both Ryvol and the
Omeloi, talks between the foreign affairs departments collapsed. The Republic Ayasa and
Confederation of the Ramigian Nations agreed to submit the case to the Court.
14
SUMMARY OF PLEADINGS
FIRST PLEADING
The Confederation of Ramigian Nations is not liable for the worsening of the limara
outbreak in the Ayasan border. The case is inadmissible before the ICJ for failure of the states to
exhaust local remedies. Furthermore, exceptions to local remedy rule does not apply. The limara
Ramigo did not commit an internationally wrongful act for the activities of the Omeloi
tribesmen are not attributable to Ramigo. They are not Ramigo’s state organ by the fact that they
have local autonomy over economic matters. Moreover, conduct of Omeloi tribesmen has not
Even assuming that Omeloi tribesmen's actions are attributable to Ramigo, they did not
violate treaty and customary international laws because the cutting of Ayasa’s access to Sanagu
is a valid countermeasure. This was in response to the breach attributable to Ayasa. The Omeloi
called upon the Rylov scientists and researchers to discontinue its internationally wrongful acts
by manifestation of protest. The relations to the land are not merely a matter of possession that’s
SECOND PLEADING
Ramigo did not violate any environmental law for the burning of border trees by the
Omeloi tribe is not attributable to Ramigo. It is is due to Ayasa’s failure to faithfully execute the
agreement.
15
THIRD PLEADING
The use of the plant by Ayasa’s citizens violated the indigenous people’s rights under the
UNDRIPS, ILO convention 169, ICCPR AND ICESCR. The Omeloi tribe is an indigenous
health emergency, however, in accordance to the indivisibility principle- that civil and political
rights on one hand, and economic, social and cultural rights on the other, are complementary,
mutually reinforcing and best realized when implemented together, Ayasa’s right to health
FOURTH PLEADING
Ayasa did not acquire intellectual property rights over the drug and the smoking process
for they did not meet the criteria for patentability. Ayasa is liable for Biopiracy and has violated
benefit sharing.
Ayasa also violated the Paris Convention for failure to recognize the contribution of the
Omeloi tribe for its development and processing for how indigenous people’s contributions are
16
MAIN PLEADINGS
“Local remedies” means legal remedies which are open to the injured person before the
judicial or administrative courts or bodies, whether ordinary or special, of the State alleged to be
Brownlie observed that “a claim will not be admissible on the international plane unless
the individual alien or corporation concerned has exhausted the legal remedies available to him
in the state which is alleged to be the author of injury.”2 In Interhandel, the Court exhorted that
generally applied in diplomatic protection claims, to give “the State where the violation occurred
… an opportunity to redress it by its own means, within the framework of its domestic legal
system,” before resorting to international proceedings.3 Neither Ramigo, Omeloi nor Ayasa have
1
Article 14 (2), Draft Articles on Diplomatic Protection
2
Ian Brownlie, Principles of Public International Law (7th ed. Oxford University Press, Oxford 2008)
492
3 Interhandel, Switzerland v United States, Preliminary Objections, Judgment, ICJ GL No 34, [1959] ICJ
Rep 6, ICGJ 171 (ICJ 1959), 21st March 1959
17
attempted redress in local Ayasan or Ramigian Courts as they were obliged to by customary
While Crawford stated that the local remedies rule may be waived by “treaty between the
Forum State and the State of Nationality”,5 in ELSI, the ICJ found itself “unable to accept that an
important principle of customary international law should be held to have been tacitly dispensed
local remedies rule7, all of which does not apply in the dispute. Specifically, none of the injured
are manifestly precluded from pursuing local remedies8 and neither States have waived the
4
Article 20, Annex A, Compromis.
5
James R Crawford and Thomas D Grant, ‘Exhaustion of local remedies’ [2007] Max Planck
Encyclopedia of Public International Law
6
Case concerning Elettronica Sicula SpA (ELSI) (US v Italy) [1989] ICJ Rep 15 50
7
Article 15, Draft Articles on Diplomatic Protection
8
Id. (d)
9
Id. (e)
10
Annex A, Compromis.
18
failed to meet the obvious futility test11 - that local remedies need not be exhausted where the
local court has no jurisdiction over the dispute in question12 precisely because a criminal case
may be filed in the courts of the country where the offense took place.13
Ayasa’s soil is fertile due to the sediments deposited by the Lusewa River. This is why
agriculture is Ayasa’s primary industry. However, soil fertility declined due to poor farming
activities which eventually resulted to less productive harvests and less nutritious crops.14 It is
therefore reasonable to conclude that the outbreak was caused by the insufficiency of Purahuaca
which did not grow as abundantly and as potent as those in Sanagu due to Ayasa’s poor farming
11
Norwegian Loans (France v. Norway), Judgment, I.C.J. Reports 1957, at p. 39.
12
Panevezys-Saldutiskis Railway case, at p. 18, Arbitration under Article 181 of the Treaty of Neuilly,
reported in AJIL, vol.28. (1934), p. 760 at p. 789;
13
Annex A, Compromis
14
Ibid ¶33
19
D. RAMIGO DID NOT COMMIT AN INTERNATIONALLY WRONGFUL ACT
In theory, the conduct of all human beings, corporations or collectivities linked to the
State by nationality, habitual residence or incorporation might be attributed to the State, whether
or not they have any connection to the Government. In international law, such an approach is
avoided, both with a view to limiting responsibility to conduct which engages the State as an
organization, and also so as to recognize the autonomy of persons acting on their own account
and not at the instigation of a public authority. Thus the general rule is that the only conduct
attributed to the State at the international level is that of its organs of government, or of others
who have acted under the direction, instigation or control of those organs, i.e. as agents of the
State.15
The Omeloi tribe were not, in any way, exercising any executive, legislative, judicial or
other governmental function in any and all of their acts, to be considered a state organ.16 Further,
internal laws of the Confederation of Ramigian Nations has not classified nor characterized the
tribe to be as such.17 Elements of governmental authority are exercised when a particular entity
has been empowered by the law of that state to exercise functions of a public character normally
15
I. Brownlie, System of the Law of Nations: State Responsibility, Part I (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1983),
pp. 132–166; The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal: Its Contribution to the Law of State Responsibility,
R. B. Lillich and D. B. Magraw, eds. (Irvington-on-Hudson, N.Y., Transnational, 1998), p. 109;
16
Article 4(1), Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
17
Id. Article 4(2)
20
exercised by state organs.18 When there is no performance of a public function, and the conduct
Internationally wrongful acts of States arise when there is an act or omission attributable
private individuals or entities, not acting on behalf of the State, is not considered as an act of the
State under international law.21 Such conduct may be attributed to the State if and only to the
extent that it has acknowledged and adopted said conduct as its own22, clearly and
unequivocally.23 Ramigo refused to take responsibility, with Prime Minister Reino saying that
the Omeloi people are autonomous and that the Ramigian state did not condone as such is
not an act of the state of Ramigo but only of the Omeloi, who are autonomous (¶33,
Compromis). Autonomous areas are regions of a State, usually possessing some ethnic or
cultural distinctiveness, which have been granted separate powers of internal administration, to
18
Id. Article 5(1)
19
Emilio Agustín Maffezini v. The Kingdom of Spain, ICSID Case No. ARB/97/7
20
Articles of State Responsibility (ASR), G.A. Res. 56/83, Annex UN Doc. A/RES/58/83/Annex
(January 28, 2002), art.2.
21
Id. art.11, in relation to arts.5-10; Harris, supra note 63 at 431.
22
ASR, supra note 95.
23
Crawford, The International Commission’s Articles on State Responsibility: Introduction, Text and
Commentaries (2002) at 123.
21
whatever degree.24 Confederation of Ramigian nations is composed of autonomous regions
reporting to a central government with limited powers. The autonomous regions decide on their
own infrastructure, natural resource utilization, local taxes, business laws, and use of allocated
funds from the central government (R.5). The Purahuaca Harvest and Research Arrangement
(Annex B) was negotiated ONLY between the Omeloi and the Ayasan government—it did not
the state acknowledges or adopts private conduct as its own.25 This does not mean mere factual
acknowledgement26 i.e. to say mere ‘approval’ or ‘endorsement’ of conduct, does not involve
assumption of responsibility.27 For example, in the Lighthouses arbitration, Greece was held
liable for the breach of a concession agreement initiated by Crete at a period when the latter was
an autonomous territory of the Ottoman Empire, partly on the basis that the breach had been
“endorsed by Greece and eventually continued by her, even after the acquisition of territorial
24
James Crawford, The Creation of States in International Law 323 (Oxford Univ. Press 2d ed. 2006).
25
Article 11, Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
26
SHAW, INTERNATIONAL LAW 119 (2008).
27
supra note 2, Art.11,Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts
22
sovereignty over the island”.28 Herein, Ramigo has acknowledged only the factual existence of
the breaches but it has not assumed responsibility to adopt these activities as its own. It clearly
denied the existence of any control of the government over such private acts.
Article 49(1) of ASR requires that the countermeasure be (1) directed against a State that
committed an internationally wrongful act in order (2) to induce that State’s compliance with its
international obligations.29 On the first element, the prohibition was directed against Rylov
researchers who are employees of Rylov Corporation, a state organ of Ayasa. Rylov Corporation
is Ayasa’s state organ for it was bought by the government to develop treatment- a function of
public character (¶17, Compromis).30 In violating the Purahuaca Harvest and Research
Agreement (PHRA), Ayasa failed to carry out the principle of pacta sunt servanda which
demands that sovereign parties to an international treaty should abide by the terms of a treaty in
good faith.31 Further, violation of the PHRA falls squarely as a breach of an international
28
Affaire relative a la concession des phares de l’Empire ottoman, UNRIAA, vol. XII (Sales No. 63.V.3),
p. 155, at p. 198 (1956).
29
Article 49(1), Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
30
Article 5(1), Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
31
Article 26, Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties
23
obligation for the act of Ayasa is not in conformity with what is required of it by its
obligations.32
Before resorting to countermeasures, the injured State must call on the responsible State
to cease its violations.33 The Omeloi elders manifested their protest upon seeing processes
contrary to theirs and to the agreement.34The Rylov researchers were made aware that before
they can extract more, they should pay first and plant more seedlings.35
form of collective property of the land, in the sense that ownership of the land is not centered on
an individual but rather on the group and its community.36 For indigenous communities, relations
to the land are not merely a matter of possession and production but a material and spiritual
32
Article 12, Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
33
Id.Article 52 (1a)
34
(¶23, 24, Compromis).
35
Ibid. ¶25
36
Mayagna Awas Tingni Community v. Nicaragua; Judgment of Aug.31, 2001, par.149
24
element which they must fully enjoy, even to preserve their cultural legacy and transmit it to
future generations.37
Sanagu, the Omeloi carried out a “reciprocal countermeasure”- one which involve suspension of
performance of obligations towards the responsible State “if such obligations correspond to, or
are directly connected with, the obligation breached”.39 It is also recognized that
countermeasures are strictly limited to the requirements of the situation and that there are
Omeloi’s countermeasure was only a prohibition with no use of force or threat (¶34,
Compromis). Second, countermeasures are limited by the requirement that they be directed at the
37
Ibid.
38
E. Zoller, Peacetime Unilateral Remedies: An Analysis of Countermeasures (Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.,
Transnational, 1984), pp. 179–189;
39
William Riphagen, article 8 of Part Two of the draft articles, Yearbook . . . 1985, vol. II (Part One), p.
10, document A/ CN.4/389.
40
Materials on the Responsibility of States For Internationally Wrongful Acts, United Nations Legislative
Series, New York, 2012, Book 25, pp. 306
41
Article 50(1a), Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts,2011
25
responsible State and not at third parties.42 The prohibition was directed to Rylov Researchers
who are employees of Rylov Pharmaceutical owned by Ayasa. Third, since they are taken with a
view to procuring cessation of and reparation for the internationally wrongful act and not by way
of punishment—they are temporary in character and must be as far as possible reversible in their
effects in terms of future legal relations between the two States.43 It is deducible that the
prohibition is only until the States have arrived to an equitable solution through their negotiation
not only employing the means appropriate to the aim chosen, but implies, above all, an
assessment of the appropriateness of the aim itself.45 And the aim of the prohibition is to
conserve and protect the integrity of their territory and culture. In the words of the ICJ in the
Case Concerning The United States Diplomatic and Consular Staff in Tehran46, there is the “use
of the mildest means of self-redress”.47 Considering the excessive harvest of purahuaca, (¶25,
Compromis), and the abbreviation of the process (¶24, Compromis), a mere prohibition to access
Sanagu could even be less than equitable. Fifth, they must not involve any departure from
42
Article 49(1) & (2), Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
43
Id at par. (2) & (3), Article 53
44
Art.51,Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
45
Case Concerning the United States Diplomatic and Consular Staff in Tehran, 24 May 1980, ICJ Reports
(1980) 2.
46
Judgment of 24 May 1980, ICJ Reports (1980) 2.
47
Id.
26
certain basic obligations, in particular those under peremptory norms of general international
law.48
Ultimately, “physical control of territory and not sovereignty or legitimacy of title, is the
basis of State Liability for acts affecting other States”.49 In burning the purahuaca on the side of
Ayasa50, Omeloi was neither performing an act as a state organ51, nor performing a governmental
function to be considered a state organ52, nor classified by Ramigo as such.53 Even the PHRA is
Further, Ramigian guards could not be faulted with the burning owing to the fact that
they simply stood by without doing anything.55 Under the provision on Border Protection each
party shall send a contingent to patrol the rainforest in order to prevent destruction, vandalism or
48
Article 50(1), Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts,2011
49
Legal Consequences for States of the Continued Presence of South Africa in Namibia notwithstanding
Security Council Resolution 276 (1970), Advisory Opinion, (1971) ICJ Rep.16, 54, ¶118
50
Compromis, ¶29
51
I. Brownlie, System of the Law of Nations: State Responsibility, Part I (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1983),
pp. 132–166
52
Article 4(1), Responsibility of States for Internationally Wrongful Acts, 2011
53
Id. Article 4(2)
54
Compromis, ¶20
55
Id. ¶31
27
unlawful.56 It is thus incumbent, first and foremost, upon Ayasan guards to respond to the
Rather than serving as a mere source of subsistence, the lands and resources of
indigenous communities are part of their social, ancestral and spiritual essence, and are necessary
to the tribe’s survival.57 Further, cultural and economic survival of indigenous tribal people
depends on their ability to use the natural resources that are linked with their traditions.58 Justice
and collective responsibility are central tenets within traditional society. If the community is
wronged, there is an obligation to avenge the offense committed.59 The non-recognition of the
contributions of the Omeloi to the development of the drug, which is a form of discrimination,60
prompted the tribe to burn the purahuacas in the Ayasan side of the river.61 Internationally
accepted ideas of the various obligations engendered by human rights indicate that all rights,
both civil and political rights and social and economic, generate at least four levels of duties for a
State that undertakes to adhere to a rights regime, namely the duty to respect, protect, promote,
56
Id. Annex A, Art.15
57
Samaraka v. Suriname, IACHR Series C No 185, IHRL 3058 (IACHR 2008), 12th August 2008, Inter-
American Court of Human Rights [IACtHR], para.82;
58
Ibid. para.120
59
Moiwana Community v. Suriname, Judgment of June 15, 2005, para.86(10)
60
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, Art.1
61
Compromis, ¶29
28
and fulfil these rights.62 Governments have a duty to protect their citizens, not only through
appropriate legislation and effective enforcement but also by protecting them from damaging
acts that may be perpetrated by private parties. 63This duty calls for positive action on [the] part
of governments in fulfilling their obligation under human rights instruments.64 Since Ayasa
failed to comply with its duties and obligations to the detriment of the Omeloi, it subjected itself
to the anger of the tribe, manifested through the burning of the purahuaca on the Ayasan side of
the river65 which is deducible as the perceived measure of the tribe to avenge the offenses
Article 5 states that Contracting Parties shall cooperate with other Contracting Parties for the
conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity as far as possible and as appropriate.67
Omeloi elders eventually manifested to have understood the desperation of the Ayasan to find a
62
Ogoni v. Nigeria, Communication No.155/96, 27 May 2002, African Commission on Human and
People’s Rights, para.44.
63
Id. Para.57
64
Id.
65
Compromis, ¶29
66
Moiwana Community v. Suriname, Judgment of June 15, 2005, para.86(10)
67
Convention on Biological Diversity, United Nations 1992
29
cure and allowed harvesting of the Purahuaca.68 As a result of such cooperation, the PHRA was
69
negotiated between parties. Under Article 8(c) contracting parties shall regulate and manage
biological resources within or outside protected areas with a view to ensuring their conservation
and sustainable use.70 This has been complied with through the Protection Agreement71
inhibited a country at the time of conquest, colonization and the establishment of extant state
borders.73 They form at present non-dominant sectors of society and are determined to preserve,
develop and transmit to future generations their ancestral territories, and their ethnic identity, as
68
Compromis, ¶20
69
Id.
70
Id. Article 8(c)
71
Annex A, Compromis
72
UN Document A/61/L.67 12 September 2007: The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples
73
Article 1(b), International Labour Convention No.169
30
the basis of their continued existence as peoples, in accordance with their own cultural, social
The Omelois have lived in both sides of the Lusewa Rainforest for centuries75 until they
were allowed to go back to Sanagu in the 18th century.76 Since Sanagu became an autonomous
region in 1915,77 Omeloi customs are considered the law of the land. The Omeloi tribe’s
connection to Sanagu79 and they retain their own distinctive social, economic, cultural and
political institutions.80 Thus, the Omelois are considered indigenous peoples under ILO 169.81
74
José Martinez Cobo, “Study of the Problem of Discrimination Against Indigenous Populations”, supra.
75
Compromis, ¶6.
76
Compromis, ¶7.
77
Ibid.
78
Compromis, ¶6.
79
Compromis, ¶7.
80
Compromis, ¶8..
81
ILO, “Indigenous & Tribal peoples’ rights in practice – A guide to ILO Convention No. 169”
Programme to Promote ILO Convention No. 169 (PRO 169), International Labour Standards Department,
2009, p. 9; Case of Ituango-massacre v. Colombia, 2006 Inter-Am. Ct. H.R (ser. C) No. 148, (July 1,
2006),
31
D. AYASA VIOLATED THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES UNDER THE
UNDRIPS, ILO CONVENTION 169, ICCPR AND ICESCR.
The Declaration and Convention No. 169 are based on the recognition of the particular
significance and cultural and spiritual values that indigenous peoples attach to their lands and
territories, which go far beyond their simple monetary or productive value.82 Both instruments
stipulate that indigenous peoples have the right to determine their priorities and strategies for
development and use of their lands, territories, and resources.83 In general, indigenous peoples’
rights to land, territories, and resources must be understood in the broader context of these
a. Right to property.
The Inter-American Court of Human Right (IACHR) has extended the right to property in
82
INTER-AGENCY SUPPORT GROUP ON INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ ISSUES, “Land, Territories
and Resources”
<http://www.un.org/en/ga/president/68/pdf/wcip/IASG%20Paper%20_%20Lands%20territories%20and
%20resources%20-%20rev1.pdf> (last visited October 21, 2018)
83
UNDRIP art. 32(1); ILO Convention 169 art. 7(1).
84
UNDRIP, Article 3.
85
UNDRIP, Article 31.
86
UNDRIP, Article 2.
87
UNDRIP, Article 8.
88
UNDRIP, Article 26.
32
property.89 “Property” can be defined as those material things which can be possessed, as well as
any right which may be part of a person’s patrimony; that concept includes all movables and
immovables, corporeal and incorporeal elements and any other intangible object capable of
having value.90 In this case, the purahuaca is considered a communal property by an indigenous
community.91
concessions to avoid violation of the indigenous community’s right to property.93 Ayasa failed to
ensure the effective participation of the indigenous people, in conformity with their customs and
traditions, regarding the harvesting and smoking process of the purahuaca.94 Ayasa also failed to
guarantee that the indigenous people will receive a reasonable benefit from the harvesting of
purahuaca because they had 75 more trees that was agreed upon in the PHR Agreement.95
Both UNDRIP and Convention No. 160 comprise general provisions related to the duty
of states to consult and cooperate with indigenous peoples, in order to obtain free, prior, and
89
Mayagna (Sumo) Awas Tingni Community v. Nicaragua, ¶148-149
90
Id. ¶144. See also, Ivcher Bronstein Case. Judgment of February 6, 2001. C Series No. 74, para. 122
91
Compromis, ¶ ¶9,16.
92
Saramaka People v Suriname,IACHR Series C No 185, IHRL 3058 (IACHR 2008), 12th August 2008,
Inter-American Court of Human Rights [IACtHR]
93
Id. ¶129
94
Compromis, ¶24,
95
Compromis, ¶25.
33
informed consent.96 States have a duty to consult indigenous peoples “in order to obtain their
free, prior and informed consent prior to the approval of any project affecting their lands or
territories and other resources, particularly in connection with the development, utilization or
exploitation of mineral, water or other resources”.97 Such consultations should include a genuine
communication and understanding, mutual respect, good faith98 and undertaken with the
community must be able to influence the actual decision-making. 100This duty requires the State
to consult in good faith, through culturally appropriate procedures and with the objective of
reaching an agreement.101 It must also be highlighted that even if the consultation process has
been concluded without agreement or consent, the decision taken by the state must still respect
the substantive rights of indigenous peoples, e.g. the rights to land and to property.102
96
UNDRIP Article 19,32(1); ILO Convention 169 article 6 and15(2).
97
UNDRIP, Article 32(2)
98
ILO, “Procedures for Consultaitons with Indigenous Peoples”
<http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---dgreports/---
gender/documents/publication/wcms_534668.pdf> (last vivisted October 21, 2018)
99
ILO, 2013:13.
100
Apirana Mahuika et al. v. New Zealand (17th session, 2000), U.N. Doc. CCPR/C/70/D/547/1993, Nov.
15, 2000, para. 9.6
101
Saramaka People v. Suriname, supra. ¶133.
102
ILO, 2013: 16.
34
Ayasa did not meet this requirement because the Omeloi initially refused the harvesting
of the plant root for trade. 103 Further, no prior and informed consent was obtained because Rylov
researchers had to resort to illicitly pluck out purahuaca flowers and bribe Ramigian border
guards once caught.104 The initial negotiations was also between Ayasan’s Department of Trade
and Commerce and Ramigo, not between Ayasa and Omeloi.105 While the Purahuaca Harvest
and Research Arrangement106 provides for consultations with the community in Article 20107,
Rylov researchers fell short in compliance as evidenced by their unpermitted grafting process,
abbreviation of the smoking and drying process, and the barbaric use of metal cutters.108
Indigenous peoples contribute with natural resources and thus are entitled to share in the
instruments regarding indigenous and tribal peoples’ rights110 can be said to be inherent to the
103
Compromis, ¶16.
104
Compromis, ¶17.
105
Compromis, ¶16.
106
Annex B, Compromis
107
Article 20, Annex B, Compromis
108
Compromis, ¶¶20, 24.
109
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms of
Indigenous People, Mr. Rodolfo Stavenhagen, U.N. Doc. E/CN.4/2003/90 (Jan. 21, 2003), paras. 52 and
70.
110
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Article 32; d I.L.O. Convention No.
169, Article 15(2).
35
right of compensation recognized under Article 21(2) of the Convention111 which states that “no
one shall be deprived of his property except upon payment of just compensation, for reasons of
public utility or social interest, and in the cases and according to the forms established by
law”.112 The Court considers that the right to obtain compensation under Article 21(2) of the
Convention extends not only to the total deprivation of property title by way of expropriation by
the State, for example, but also to the deprivation of the regular use and enjoyment of such
property.113
In the present context, the right to obtain “just compensation” pursuant to Article 21(2) of
the Convention translates into a right of the Omeloi tribe to reasonably share in the benefits made
as a result of a restriction or deprivation of their right to the use and enjoyment of the purahuaca
necessary for their survival.114 This is also not met by Ayasa. The amount Ayasa paid was only
worth 25 purahuaca trees, but their harvest went as far as 100 trees.115 Further, the Omeloi Tribe
were not paid royalties for the smoking and drying process after the patenting of the drug and the
smoking process.116
111
American Convention on Human Rights.
112
Id. ¶21(2)
113
Saramaka People v. Suriname, p.139
114
Compromis, ¶¶20,21.
115
Compromis, ¶¶21,25.
116
Compromis, ¶¶26,27.
36
d. Prior environmental and social impact assessments
The Purahuaca Harvest and Research Arrangement did not provide for any environmental
or social impact assessments.117 Even the negotiations only resulted to an agreement wherein
Omeloi will allow Ayasan people and machines to enter their land and harvest the roots while
Ayasa will pay for the extraction of the plants, use of the huacasera process and any damage to
Control by indigenous peoples over developments affecting them and their lands,
territories and resources will enable them to maintain and strengthen their institutions, cultures
and traditions, and to promote their development in accordance with their aspirations and
needs”.119 Ayasa violated the Omeloi’s (a) right to conserve vital medicinal plants; and (b) the
Indigenous peoples have the right to their traditional medicines and to maintain their
health practices, including the conservation of their vital medicinal plants, animals and
minerals.120 The Omeloi has limited the harvesting to only 25 trees121 considering the fact that
117
Annex B, Compromis.
118
Compromis, ¶20.
119
UNDRIP,Preamble
120
UNDRIP, Article 24.
121
Compromis, ¶21.
37
the purahuaca blooms only once in every four years122 and in harvesting an excess of 75
123
puruahaca trees, Ayasa disregarded the Omeloi’s right to conserve their vital medicinal
plants.124
ownership
Indigenous peoples have the right to own, use, develop and control the lands, territories
and resources that they possess by reason of traditional ownership or other traditional occupation
or use, as well as those which they have otherwise acquired.125 The right to control is apparent in
the agreement126 to the effect that the methods of harvesting and the subsequent processing of the
purahuaca shall be chosen in consultation with the Elders of the Omeloi Tribe.127 In grafting the
plant128 and by abbreviating the smoking process129, Ayasa has violated such right.
122
Compromis, ¶11.
123
Compromis, ¶25.
124
UNDRIP, Article 24.
125
Id. Art.26(2)
126
Annex B, Compromis
127
Art.20, Annex B, Compromis
128
Compromis, ¶22.
129
Compromis, ¶24.
38
3. VIOLATION OF THE ICCPR AND ICESCR.
Having ratified both conventions, Ayasa recognizes that in accordance with the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the ideal of free human beings enjoying freedom from fear and
want can only be achieved if conditions are created whereby everyone may enjoy his economic,
social and cultural rights.130 Ayasa’s failure to comply with the PHRA131, failure to observe the
safeguards for the protection of Omeloi’s right to property132 negates their recognition of the
principle,and their observance of the basic principle of pacta sunt servanda. 133
Ayasa has the responsibility to rehabilitate and restore degraded ecosystems and
recovery of threatened species, inter alia, through the development and implementation of plans
poor farming practices135, and merely opting to graft their purahuaca with Ramigian’s
130
Preamble, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
131
Annex B, Compromis
132
Saramaka People v Suriname,IACHR Series C No 185, IHRL 3058 (IACHR 2008), 12th August 2008,
Inter-American Court of Human Rights [IACtHR]
133
Pacta Sunt Servanda Versus The Social Role of Contracts: Case of Brazilian Agriculture Contracts,
Rezende & Zylbersztajn, June 2012.
134
Art. 8(F), Convention on Biological Diversity
135
Compromis, ¶4
39
purahuaca136in an attempt to grow a more potent plant, readily shows Ayasa’s failure to comply
Further, Ayasa is bound to respect, preserve and maintain knowledge, innovations and
conservation of biological diversity and promote wider application, with the approval and
involvement of the holders of such knowledge and practices and encourage the equitable sharing
of the benefits arising from the utilization of such knowledge and practices.138 Ayasa’s failure to
faithfully execute the provisions of the Purahuaca Harvest and Research Agreement139, negates
everyone to take part in cultural life142 and to benefit from the protection of the moral and
material interests resulting from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he is the
author.143 Further, in those States in which ethnic minorities exists, persons belonging to such
136
Ibid. ¶22
137
Art. 8(F), Convention on Biological Diversity
138
Ibid. Art. 8(J)
139
Compromis, Annex B
140
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
141
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
142
Ibid. Art.15 (A)
143
Ibid. Art. 15(C)
40
minorities shall not be denied the right, in community with the other members of their group, to
enjoy their own culture.144 It is important to note that Omeloi acknowledged the necessity of
principle- that civil and political rights on one hand, and economic, social and cultural rights on
the other, are complementary, mutually reinforcing and best realized when implemented
together,146 Ayasa’s right to health cannot prevail over Omeloi’s cultural rights.
tradition-based intellectual activity.148 Examples of traditional knowledge include the use of the
hoodia149 cactus by the Kung Bushmen in Africa to stave off hunger, the use of j'oublie150 in
144
Art. 27, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
145
Compromis, ¶20
146
Dorothea Anthony, Indivisibility of Human Rights: A Theoretical Critique
147
See Daniel Gervais, Traditional Knowledge and Intellectual Property: A TRIPS- Compatible
Approach, MICH. ST. L. REV. 137, 140 (2005).
148
WORLD INTELLECTUAL PROP. ORG., INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY NEEDS AND
EXPECTATIONS OF TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE HOLDERS: WIPO REPORT ON FACT-
FINDING MISSIONS ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE
(1998-1999), at 25 (Apr. 2001),
149
Lere Amusan,, “Politics Of Biopiracy: An Adventure Into Hoodia/Xhoba Patenting In Southern
Africa”, African Journal, Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2017; 14(1): 103–109.
41
Cameroon and Gabon as a sweetener, and the use of ground roots151 in Mexico for removing
teeth.152 Like the purahuaca and huacasera, each natural product has its own method of
preparation153that has been developed from generation to generation within these communities. It
without compensation’.156 The patent acquired by Ayasa is illegal because it does not recognize,
150
Fariba Assadi-Porter . “How Sweet It Is: Detailed Molecular and Functional Studies of Brazzein, a
Sweet Protein and Its Analogs.”. Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Madison
151
Giovannini P, Reyes-García V, Waldstein A, Heinrich M. Do pharmaceuticals displace local
knowledge and use of medicinal plants? Estimates from a cross-sectional study in a rural indigenous
community, Mexico. Social Science & Medicine. 2011; 72, 928–936.
152
STEPHEN HANSEN & JUSTIN VANFLEET, TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE AND
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: A HANDBOOK ON ISSUES AND OPTIONS FOR TRADITIONAL
KNOWLEDGE HOLDERS IN PROTECTING THEIR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND
MAINTAINING BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY 3 (2003)
153
John A. Beutler. Natural Products as a Foundation for Drug Discovery. Curr Protoc Pharmacol. 2009
Sep 1; 46: 9.11.1–9.11.21.
154
Divyangana Dhankar. Commercialisation and Biopiracy of Genetic Resources in the 21st Century: The Imminent
Need for Stronger Regulation. 2016 April 17
155
Barnes EC. The use of isolated natural products as scaffolds for the generation of chemically diverse
screening libraries for drug discovery. 2016 Mar;33(3):372-81. doi: 10.1039/c5np00121h. Epub 2016 Jan
156
Dutfield G, Intellectual Property, Biogenetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge (Earthscan
Publications, London), 2004, p. 52.
42
respect or adequately compensate the rightful owners of the life forms appropriated or the
including humans—and the traditional cultural knowledge that accompanies it. It infringes on a
patent for the invention to the “first–to–file” (the pharmaceutical company) rather than to the
Such examples of importance are the patents of Neem160, Turmerich161, Ayahuasca162, the
Hoodia cactus163and the Tepezcohuite164, which all can be read about below. Such an
which acknowledges that states have a sovereign right over the resources within their jurisdiction
157
Ajeet Mathur. Who Owns Traditional Knowledge? Economic and Political Weekly
159
Ibid
160
65 patents are filed on the Neem.
161
U.S. Pat. 5,401,504
162
U.S. Pat PP 05751.
163
WO 9846243.
164
U.S. Pat. 4,883,663 and U.S. Pat. 5,122,374.
43
and if those resources were utilised in patents or in any other system without the consent of the
sovereign then misappropriation or bio piracy is said to have taken place. 165
Minimum standards for patent law exist internationally, as evidenced by Article 27 of the
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) agreement. This article provides
that “patents shall be available for any inventions, whether products or processes, in all fields of
technology, provided that they are new, involve an incentive step and are capable of industrial
application. However, nations can choose to exclude certain inventions, such as those that harm
the public, types of medical treatments, and certain plants from patentability.
If a patent does not respect one of the three criteria for access (novelty, inventiveness and
commercial application), it is not legally admissible and must be canceled. Thus, a patent based
on traditional knowledge is illegal, because it does not respect the principle of novelty, nor does
Rylov contends that they acquired a patent over the drug and the smoking process. (r. 26)
However, the smoking process (r. 10) was not followed by the researchers in making the drug.
What was covered by the patent were thus limited to the “modern techniques”. (r. 26)
The smoking process of the huacasera is a traditional knowledge that belongs exclusively
to the Omelois.166 Cultural property is property which has a special cultural significance to a
165
Art.2, Convention on Biological Diversity
166
Compromis, ¶17
44
nation, being intertwined with the very identity of the group claiming it,167 serving as basis for
cultural memory,168 and reflecting the history of lost civilizations. Thus, the Huacasera ritual and
Pharmaceutical bio-prospecting has been sharply criticized for what has become known as
peoples received little or nothing in return. 171, this the Omelois never had.172
167
Cohan, An Examination of Archaelogical Ethics and the Repatriation Movement Respecting Culural
Property (Part Two), 28 Environs Envt’l. L. & Pol’y J. 1 (2004).
168
Merryman, The Public Interest in Cultural Property, 77 Calif. L. Rev. 339 (1989).
169
Chimento, Comment: Lost Artifacts of the Incas: Cultural Property and the Repatriation Movement, 54
Loy. L. Rev. 209 (2008).
170
Juan B (2017) Bioprospecting and Drug Development, Parameters for a Rational Search and Validation of
Biodiversity. J Microb Biochem Technol 9:e128. doi:10.4172/1948-5948.1000e128
171
Ibid.
172
Compromis, p. 27
45
D. AYASA VIOLATED THE PARIS CONVENTION FOR FAILURE TO
RECOGNIZE THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE OMELOI TRIBE FOR ITS
DEVELOPMENT AND PROCESSING.
Ayasa violated its duty under Section 20 of the Purahuaca Harvest and Research
Agreement. (r. Annex B, Art. 20). ¶ A patent is a legal document granted by a government giving
exclusive rights to the inventor. The original theory behind patent law is that one who “invents”
Under the Paris Convention, the inventor has the right to be named in the patent.
173
Contrary to the patent secured by Rylov, the Omelois were not mentioned as the inventors of
the mixture, nor were their contributions cited in the application. Rylov assumed authorship over
Huacaxin, disregarding its people who originally concocted it- the Omelois. 174
The requirement of newness, as defined by U.S. patent law is that one may not patent an
173
T. Cattier and M. Panizzon, hgal Perspectives on Traditional Knowledge: The Case f.r Intellectual Property
46
o he has abandoned the invention, or
foreign country prior to the date of the application in this country....175 This was not
complied by Ayasa becase the Omelois had already been using the mixture before it
The non-obvious requirement is designed to advance the state of useful arts177 by limiting
the issuance of patents. The statutory requirement for non-obviousness states that:
matter sought to be patented and the prior art are such that the subject
matter as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was
made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which said subject
The US Supreme Court held in Graham v. John Deere179 that four basic inquires should
be made when addressing non- obviousness.First, the scope and content of the prior art should be
175
35 U.S.C. § 102 (1994).
176
Compromis ¶ 9
177
The term art comes from Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, “Science and Useful Arts,” and
refers to a particular subject matter in a field of study.
178
35 U.S.C. § 103 (1994).
179
383 U.S. 1 (1966)
47
180
ascertained. Second, the level of ordinary skill in the particular field should be assessed.
181
Third, the difference between the prior art and the claims at issue is examined.182 Finally, a
determination is made as to whether these differences would have been obvious to a layperson in
183
the applicable field at the time the invention was made.
The third element assessed under an application for a patent requires that an invention
must be capable of achieving some minimal useful purpose.184 However, under international law
the usefulness requirement is more stringent and must be able to generate profits.185 Indigenous
tribe’s production of medicinal applications and religious ceremonies do not usually include
profitability. 186
180
Ibid.
181
Ibid.
182
Ibid.
183
Drahos, P. (ed.), 1999: Intellectual Property, Aldershot, Ashgate.
184
BURGE, supra note 9, at 43.
185
Scott Holwick, Developing Nations and the Agreement on
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, 1999 COLO. J. INT’L ENVTL. L. & POL’Y 49,
57 (2000).
186
Compromis, ¶9
48
E. HOW INDIGENOUS PEOPLE’S CONTRIBUTIONS ARE RECONCILED WITH
The Convention also recognizes the "knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous
and local communities" and specifically "encourage[s] the equitable sharing of benefits arising
from the utilization of such knowledge, innovations and practices".187The CBD sanctions
bilateral agreements by making repeated reference to "mutually agreed terms" for access to
The concept of benefit sharing is appropriate in situations where exclusive property rights
are considered inappropriate. It is believed that the benefits accruing to communities enable them
documented traditional knowledge attains the character of prior art under patent law. Since such
information is available to public, a patent cannot be granted over it but at the same time, there is
187
Article 8(j) CBD
188
Article 15(4) id.
189
Article 15(5) id.
190
Carlos M Correa, “Traditional Knowledge and intellectual property” 6-7 (QUNO, Geneva,
2001).
49
no restraint in the use of such traditional knowledge for commercial purposes, as it is not
Recognition by the UNESCO of the huacasera ritual by the Omeloi’s constitute a prior
art. In fact, both the purahuaca tree and the huacasera ritual are included in its List of Intangible
191
Compromis, ¶11
50
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
The Confederation of Ramigian Nations respectfully requests this Court to adjudge and declare
that:
I.
II.
III.
The use of the plant by Ayasa’s citizens is a violation of indigenous peoples’ rights; and
IV.
Ayasa has not rightfully acquired intellectual property rights over the plant.
51