India today ruled out amendment to the patent law, asserting that there are no gaps in protection of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR).
"There is no proposal to amend patent law... There is no proposal to anything to do with Indian Patent Act," Commerce and Industry Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said while replying to questions in the Rajya Sabha.
Responding to questions from members, she said the government is under "no pressure" on the IPR front from any quarter and Indian laws meet international norms.
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She replied in negative to a question if the government has recently lost some IPR cases against USA.
Congress leader and former Commerce Minister Anand Sharma said the US has a strong lobby putting pressure on India to go beyond TRIPS in the pharmaceutical sector. He wanted to know if discussions were taking place on TRIPS plus issues.
To this, Sitharaman said no new joint task force has been set up with the US to deal with IPR issues.
She said under the India-US Trade Policy Forum, the government was continuing the mechanism put in place in 2010. There are five committees, including one on IPR.
The Minister said a think tank has been set-up to come out with a broad policy on IPR.
The think tank has already submitted its first draft report on which the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) has sought public comments.