Transcript Document

Operationalizing Veterinary Legal Reform
in Development Projects
Dr Brian Bedard and Dr Laurent Msellati
World Bank Livestock Group
OIE Global Conference on Veterinary Legislation
December 7-9, 2010
Djerba, Tunisia
Outline
World Bank Engagement in Livestock Sector
and Animal Health
Experience with Veterinary Legal Reform in the
Europe and Central Asia Region (ECA)
Lessons Learned and Specific Issues
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World Bank Engagement
in Animal Health
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World Bank Engagement in Livestock Sector
Poverty reduction and rural development
Agricultural competitiveness, food safety and
trade
Pasture management and rehabilitation
“One Health” and pandemic preparedness
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i.e. Avian influenza and H1N1
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Drivers for Involvement in Animal Health
Direct impact on rural livelihood
Basic determinant of livestock production
Trade restrictions and economic impact
Public health and zoonoses – “One Health”
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Great Progress on Methodology
Reform of the Legal and Regulatory framework is at
the core of good governance and a key component of
most of the World Bank-funded projects in the animal
health sector…..
….. but in the past analysis was done on an ad-hoc basis
through ESW around the time of project preparation
The PVS Methodology widely used since 2006 offered
an opportunity to harmonize the approach and drive
investments
A similar assessment methodology is being advocated
for Public Health.
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Establishing Investment Priorities
About 100 countries have now completed the PVS
which can be used by MDBs as the basis for reforms
and investments in Animal Health
STRENGTHENING
VETERINARY SERVICES
OIE/PVS
GAP
ANALYSIS
STRATEGIC
PLANS
MODERNIZING
VETERINARY LEGISLATIVE
FRAMEWORK
INCREASING
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
o INFRASTRUCTURE
o CAPACITY BUILDING
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ECA Experience with
Veterinary Legal Reform
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ECA Experience
Since 2006 WB-financed AI Projects in 13 countries: Albania, Kosovo,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Turkey, Romania, Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Moldova.
PVS /Gap Analysis promoted in cooperation with OIE in 13 countries and
Kazakhstan
Strategic plans to support veterinary services completed or ongoing,
including legal reform
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Turkey: alignment with EU legislation: PVS/Gap completed, strategic plan
ongoing with WB/OIE support.
Kyrgyzstan: drafting of new veterinary law
Armenia: revisions of existing laws
Others to follow: Central Asia as part of regional One Health project (2011)
Similar approach in other regions, but at a slower pace
Close collaboration with OIE and EU
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Resources and Approach
OIE “Guidelines of Veterinary
Legislation”
International TA including OIE
support (“Global Veterinary
Legislation Initiative”)
National TA – lawyers and
veterinarians in close partnership
“Participatory” consultations
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Lessons Learned
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Lessons Learned: Context
Understanding the overall legal framework:
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Framework laws versus regulation
Aligning with related national legislation:
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Food laws
Consumer protection
Commercial and Tax laws
Anti-monopoly legislation
Aligning with trading partners:
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EU and WTO
Old law revised or “new law” (preferred)
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Lessons Learned: Content
There is no model, each country is sovereign
Law must be clear and unambiguous
Law must include general aspects of enforcement,
compliance, incentives, penalties and sanctions
Law must include explicit definition of veterinary
organizations, roles and responsibilities:
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Competent authority, State agencies
Private veterinarians/statutory body
Civil servants/public vets/vet service
Farmers and pet owners
Definitions and translation glossary needed
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Lessons Learned: Process
It takes time, in general over 2 years
We may experience during the process changes
of key players which are likely to generate
multiple revisions
Broad consultation is critical
A good team of national lawyers is needed
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Special Issues
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Importance of Inclusion and Transparency
Promote transparency and a participatory process
Prevent veterinarians from unilaterally drafting laws
Be inclusive through working groups and round-tables:
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Private veterinarians
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Industry and farmer associations
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Agri-food processors
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Parliamentarians
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Public/consumers
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Government health services
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Donors in case of development projects
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Promotion of private veterinarians
The legal framework need to include a clear definition
of roles and responsibilities of public and private
veterinarians
The promotion of a private veterinarians establishment,
under the control of Veterinary Authorities has proved
to be an essential element for the sustainability of the
investments in Central Asia, Caucasus and Turkey
Other key factors for success include:
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The establishment of representative veterinary statutory body
and associations
The delegation of public functions (eg. vaccination) to private
vets with legal contracting
The certification of veterinarians’ qualification
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The Question of Culling and Compensation
Include in Veterinary Law or separate
compensation law?
Funded from Govt budget  under vet law
Autonomous compensation funds
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Separate Decree/law
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Charter
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Legal registration
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Operational manual
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Merci de votre
attention
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