Monday, February 8, 2016

EU drugs agency sets up Zika task force to speed vaccine work

EU drugs agency sets up Zika task force to speed vaccine work

[LONDON] Europe's drugs regulator said on Monday it had established an expert task force on Zika to advise companies working on vaccines and medicines against the virus, which is suspected of causing a spike in birth defects in Brazil.
With no currently approved vaccines or medicines and none even undergoing clinical studies, the move by the London-based European Medicines Agency (EMA) is designed to ensure Zika development work proceeds as rapidly as possible.
"The agency is encouraging medicines developers to contact EMA if they have any promising projects in this area. EMA will also proactively reach out to companies already planning to work on investigational vaccines and offer scientific and regulatory advice," it said in a statement. "Early and regular interaction with the agency can significantly speed up the development of medicines."
Several biotech and pharmaceutical companies are racing to develop a Zika vaccine, including France's Sanofi, which already has vaccine for the similar condition of dengue.
But scientists know relatively little about Zika and the road to developing a preventative shot against the mosquito-borne disease is strewn with hurdles.
REUTERS

India sees growth exceeding estimates as Modi prepares budget

India sees growth exceeding estimates as Modi prepares budget

[NEW DELHI] India sees its growth exceeding economists' estimates to overtake a slowing China, a pace Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government will be under pressure to sustain when it presents its budget on Feb. 29.
Gross domestic product will expand 7.6 per cent in the year through March, compared with 7.2 per cent a year earlier, the Statistics Ministry said in a statement on Monday in New Delhi. The median of 21 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey was for a growth of 7.4 per cent. China grew 6.9 per cent in 2015, while Russia contracted 3.7 per cent and Brazil is forecast to shrink 3.7 per cent. India's expansion slowed to 7.3 per cent in October- December from 7.4 per cent the previous quarter.
Modi's caught between the urge to boost spending in an economy that's showing mixed signs of strength, and the need to curb expenditure to meet budget deficit targets and win more rate cuts from the central bank. Indian stocks, bonds and currency saw their worst January since 2011, partly weighed down by concerns about fiscal slippage.
"It squarely falls back on the government" to spur growth, Radhika Rao, an economist at DBS Bank Ltd in Singapore, said before the data. Rajan's rate reductions last year haven't helped, so Modi needs focus spending on capex or consumption, she said.
However history shows that higher fiscal spending in India is accompanied by stronger growth but also higher inflation. That would jeopardize Rajan's 5 per cent target for March 2017, probably compelling him to keep rates unchanged this year after four cuts in 2015.
Meanwhile a deadlock in parliament has kept Modi's administration from pushing through key economic bills including a goods-and-services tax, known as GST. The levy will replace more than a dozen taxes and boost revenue and growth through compliance, lawmakers have said.
Gross value added - a measure of economic strength closely watched by the central bank - rose 71 per cent October-December, matching the median estimate, after a 7.4 per cent expansion the previous quarter.
"GST will be a sentiment turner and crucial for growth in the medium term," said Shubhada Rao, an economist with Yes Bank Ltd in Mumbai.
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Brexit could mean migrant camps in UK: Cameron's office

Brexit could mean migrant camps in UK: Cameron's office

[LONDON] Prime Minister David Cameron's office on Monday warned that Britain leaving the European Union could mean migrant camps being set up on British shores if UK border checks are removed from Calais in France.
"Should Britain leave the EU there's no guarantee those controls would remain in place," Cameron's spokesman said at a daily briefing.
"If those controls weren't in place there would be nothing to stop thousands of people crossing the Channel overnight and arriving in Kent (southeast England) and claiming asylum," he said.
Cameron will use the argument in the weeks after he calls a referendum date, The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported.
"Downing Street hopes to use the migration crisis on the continent to its advantage," the report said.
Cameron's spokesman said Britain and France had "positive working relations" on border issues.
"The point being made here is that a potential departure from the EU throws that whole relationship into question," he said.
Campaigners for Britain to leave the 28-country bloc accused the government of "scaremongering." "The agreement we have to process migrants in Calais is with France, not the EU. There is no reason for this to change on leaving the EU," said Arron Banks, co-founder of the Leave.EU campaign.
"Having failed to deliver the fundamental reform of the European Union that he promised... the prime minister is now resorting to scaremongering," he said.
But the pro-EU Britain Stronger in Europe campaign said leaving would impact the border.
"Britain's membership of the EU means we have the best of both worlds," said Will Straw, executive director of the group.
"Thanks to an agreement with the French, our border controls are located in Calais rather than Dover.
"If we left the EU, there is a very real possibility that arrangement could come to an end, making Britain's borders less secure," he said.
AFP

Scientists say climate change may have fueled Zika

Scientists say climate change may have fueled Zika

[LONDON] Climate change may have fueled the outbreak of the mosquito-born Zika virus in Latin American and make it harder for developing countries to manage future epidemics, researchers said.
Record-high temperatures last year in Brazil, Ecuador and other South America countries created ideal conditions for the mosquito that transmits Zika, which is suspected of causing birth defects, scientists said on conference call with reporters Friday.
The researchers, who cautioned any link between Zika and global warming remains unproven, said violent storms, floods and drought are prone to fostering the outbreak and spread of diseases, particularly in underdeveloped nations. In addition to creating conditions where viruses can thrive, extreme weather can hobble already over-taxed public health systems.
"Unless mitigated, climate change is likely to bring the spread of new emergent infectious diseases like Zika virus," Nick Watts, who leads a commission on health and climate change for the medical journal The Lancet, said during the call.
Rising temperatures and increased rainfall can extend the geographic range and enrich breeding areas of mosquitoes, ticks, fleas and other insects that transmit diseases, scientists said. The pathogens they carry tend to become more resilient at higher temperatures and go through their life cycles faster.
Warming "is posing risks for the transmission of vector- borne and other diseases," said Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum, the World Health Organization's climate change and health team leader, said in an interview.
The Zika epidemic parallels the 1999 West Nile Virus outbreak in New York, according to Jonathan Patz, director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin- Madison, because both arrived during record-hot summers. The Aedes aegypti mosquito, which carries the Zika virus, bites more frequently in hot weather.
"I would not want to say that climate is responsible for this," Patz said. "But it's ironic that you have got record hot temperatures."
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Showdown in Europe over privacy has US firms ducking for cover

Showdown in Europe over privacy has US firms ducking for cover

[FRANKFURT] The free flow of data across the Atlantic, the lifeblood of modern business dealings, faces an uncertain future, despite a belated, high-level deal between European and US officials this week.
Restive regulators in Europe are gearing up to enforce tough privacy laws and further court challenges await, activists say.
The breakdown of the main framework for providing legal cover for cross-border data transfers has companies large and small racing to find workable alternatives. These range from stricter data-handling policies to new technologies or paying to lease datcenters based in Europe.
Companies, facing renewed threats by privacy regulators, find themselves on legal thin ice with many of the existing procedures for managing cross-border data flows, experts say.
Google, Facebook and other big Internet services which transfer mountains of data globally are likely to be the first targets in any regulatory crackdown, they said.
Hailed as a "Privacy Shield" by European Union and U.S. negotiators who reached the new cross-border data sharing agreement, the deal faces a labyrinthine approval process before the new rules have any chance of coming into force. "Once it becomes available, businesses will want to be cautious about signing up to Privacy Shield given the potential legal challenges that special interest groups have already suggested they will be considering," cautioned Marc Dautlich, a partner with Pinsent Masons in London.
Cross-border data transfers are used in many industries for sharing employee information, when consumer data is shared to complete credit card, travel or e-commerce transactions, or to target advertising based on customer preferences.
Since 2000, up to 4,500 US companies had come to count on a simple set of rules, dubbed Safe Harbour, allowing them to self-certify they complied with privacy principles for personal data transfers from Europe to the United States. Many other firms, especially fast-growing start-ups, did nothing to comply.
In October, the European Court of Justice threw out Safe Harbour. In a landmark decision, it ruled the mechanism provided inadequate protections under European privacy laws against the sorts of spying by U.S. intelligence agencies revealed by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden in 2013.
Independent-minded national privacy regulators say they need to know more details about the so-called "Privacy Shield" but many openly doubt the agreement can bridge the gulf between the two continents' privacy practices. "Transfers to the US cannot take place on the basis of the invalidated Safe Harbour decision. EU data protection authorities will therefore deal with related cases and complaints on a case-by-case basis," Europe's national privacy regulators said in a joint statement on Wednesday.
The data commission for Schleswig-Holstein, Germany's most northern state, said it was prepared to take action on national data protection rules if citizens file complaints.
The regulator warned in October that firms found in violation of German data protection rules could face fines up to 300,000 euros (US$335,000). Across the region, multi-million euro fines could be imposed on offenders and commercial transfers of personal data prohibited, privacy experts say.
An alternative form of legal compliance offered by the EU are "standard contact clauses", or "model contracts", which require companies to spell out exactly what data is being transferred to what US companies and the measures to be taken to ensure compliance with European privacy law.
Some national data authorities offer what is known as "binding corporate rules" (BCRs), which companies mostly use for cross-border employee data transfers inside their organisations. But BCRs can take up to 12-18 months to be formalised, while model contracts can take days or weeks.
However, many regulators and privacy experts say that the same high court ruling that struck down Safe Harbour may also render model contracts and BCRs invalid, making them only a temporary safe haven for meeting European rules.
Using technology to keep data within Europe's borders is a longer term, if pricier solution. Leasing datacenters based in Europe rather than relying on centralised US servers has started to take off over the past year or two.
That's an approach huge cloud-based software companies Microsoft and Amazon.com and specialist datacenter providers have begun offering to customers to meet a patchwork of data residency requirements in Europe.
US file-sharing company Syncplicity has introduced software that keeps sensitive corporate data created in Europe within the region, offering new ways to store data in the cloud locally.
REUTERS

Facebook faces setback as India bans differential data pricing

Facebook faces setback as India bans differential data pricing

[MUMBAI] India's telecom regulator ruled against cellular operators offering plans that charge different rates for access to the Web depending on the content - a setback to Facebook Inc's push for its limited Internet plan in the South Asian nation.
Telecom operators cannot offer discriminatory tariffs for data services based on content, and are not allowed to enter into agreements with Internet companies to subsidize access to some websites, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India said in a statement Monday. Companies violating the rules will be fined, it said.
The regulator's decision comes after months of public lobbying by Facebook for India to approve its Internet sampler plan known as Free Basics, which allows customers to access the social network and other services such as education, health care, and employment listings from their phones without a data plan. The plan was criticized by activists who said it threatened net neutrality, the principle that all Internet websites should be equally accessible, and could change pricing in India for access to different websites.
The regulator, which had sought stakeholders' views, said it was guided by the principles of net neutrality and seeks to ensure data tariffs remain content agnostic. Operators will have six months to wind down existing differential pricing services, according to the regulator. 
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