Certainly, Ms. Bendayan. Thank you.
As I said, I read the request for waiver on the WTO website. It's framed in very general terms. Let's take patent rights as an example. It simply asks for a wholesale suspension, essentially in several countries.
If you were an IP rights holder and you wanted to license production of your patented product in another country, you would enter into a licensing agreement with a third party. In that licensing agreement, you would have quality control provisions. You would say that your product must meet certain standards. That's how you would do it normally.
If you just say that all bets are off, that all patent rights are suspended, you don't have any control over who's going to make those products, who's going to practise those patented inventions, and that's where you lose control over the process. I think that is an area that the waiver request simply doesn't address, as far as I have seen.