China created court to enforce IP cases (AP) Updated: 2006-03-10 15:06
China has created a special court to prosecute product piracy cases, a
government spokesman said Friday, amid demands for Beijing to step up action
against rampant illegal copying of movies, music, software and other goods.
The supreme court has named a Judicial Court of Intellectual Property to
handle such cases nationwide, court spokesman Sun Huapu said at a news
conference held during the annual meeting of China's parliament.
China is regarded as the world's top producer of illegally copied goods, and
the United States and other trading partners say the problem is getting worse
despite repeated government crackdowns.
Last year China's courts convicted 741 people in 505 criminal product piracy
cases, Sun said. He didn't say what penalties they received or give figures for
the previous year.
Courts handled 16,453 civil cases of intellectual property rights violations
in 2005, up more than 20 percent from the previous year, Sun said.
US officials say Chinese copying of goods such as software, golf clubs,
Hollywood movies and heart medications costs legitimate producers worldwide up
to US$50 billion (euro40 billion) a year in lost potential sales.
Jiang Zhipei, a supreme court judge who handles product piracy cases,
defended China's enforcement measures and called on foreign companies to help
get cases to court.
"If we don't get them into the courts, we can't judge them," he said.
Some 95 percent of product piracy cases involve violations against Chinese
companies, with only about 5 percent stemming from complaints from foreign
companies, Jiang said.
"So it's a strange phenomenon that foreign governments, and some US
congressmen, have made very strong complaints about this," he said.
Sun said authorities have launched a Web site to publicize product piracy
cases - possibly a strategy to use the threat of public shaming to deter
pirates.
"We shall reform and perfect the legal system and work mechanism relating to
intellectual property," he said, without giving details of other planned
changes.
Pirated goods are readily available in shops throughout the country despite
repeated crackdowns.
A US trade envoy who visited China this month said the problem was getting
worse. It wasn't immediately clear whether the changes announced by Sun
would satisfy Washington's demands.
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