By Cheng Zhiliang
BEIJING, April 11 (Xinhua) -- The United States said
Monday it was filing a case on intellectual property rights (IPR) against China
with the World Trade Organization (WTO), seeking quick success and instant
interests with a blind eye to facts and China's efforts.
The U.S. move is not a sensible one since it ignored
facts including the following aspects: IPR protection takes time worldwide, not
to say in the world's most populous country; China's immense efforts in
strengthening IPR protection; China's willingness to cooperate in this regard.
Piracy is a worldwide issue that has been existing
for decades not only in developing countries but also in developed ones. It is
reported some American citizens came to China to produce counterfeits and sell
them in the United States, and it is also common for global computer users to
download protected software, movies and music from the Internet for free.
Western countries took two centuries to achieve the
current level on IPR protection and it became obviously unfair to demand that
China, which became a WTO member in December 2001, accomplish the mission within
years, said Ma Xiushan, vice secretary general of the China Intellectual
Property Society.
Citing an example, Ma said that the U.S. publishers
paid no royalty to British writer Charles Dickens in the early years after the
United States was founded.
Other countries need to give China credit for its
hard and effective work on copyright protection, said Geoffrey Yu, deputy
director general of the World Intellectual Property Organization, at a forum in
Beijing last year.
"I also realize it's a very big country with a huge
population, so the situation is complex and needs special attention," the
official added.
In fact, China has exerted immense efforts on IPR
protection.
China's top court lowered the threshold to prosecute
people who manufacture or sell counterfeit intellectual property products on
April 5, stipulating that anyone who manufactures 500 or more counterfeit copies
(discs) of software and audio-video products can be prosecuted and faces a
prison term of up to three years.
The threshold for a "serious IPR offender" was
lowered from 5,000 counterfeit copies in 2004 to 2,500, and the punishment for a
serious IPR offender may be up to seven years in prison.
Earlier, more than 1.81 million pirated CDs and DVDs
were seized in a production factory in Guangzhou, capital of south China's
Guangdong Province on March 17, in the largest single crackdown on CD and DVD
piracy in the country's history.
Thirty production machines in 11 warehouses were
confiscated and 13 people arrested.
It is a pity that Max Baucus, Democratic chairman of
the U.S. Senate's powerful finance committee, said "rampant and large-scale
piracy and counterfeiting in China have persisted too long, and China is not
penalizing pirates and counterfeiters", according to a report by AFP on Monday.
By filing against China with the WTO, the United
States has ignored the Chinese government's efforts and great achievements in
strengthening IPR protection and tightening enforcement of its copyright laws,
said Tian Lipu, commissioner of the Intellectual Property Office of China on
Tuesday.
The latest move reminds people of the incident in
late March when the U.S. government imposed penalty tariffs on the imports of
Chinese coated free sheet paper.
The U.S. decision altered a 23-year old bipartisan
policy of not applying the countervailing duty (CVD) law to China, which "goes
against the consensus reached between leaders of the two countries to resolve
contradictions through dialogue," responded the Chinese government.
Global business activities have kept growing after
China's entry into the WTO, while trade frictions between China and some of its
trade partners, especially Europe and the United States, are also on the rise,
Chinese Commerce Minister Bo Xilai said in March.
China prefers to resort to consultations for the
settlement of trade frictions with its trade partners, Bo said.
The U.S. filing on piracy against China with the WTO
might also cast a shadow on bilateral trade relations, while officials from both
sides are preparing for the second round of China-U.S. Strategic Economic
Dialogue slated for May in Washington.
The last round of Dialogue ended last December in
Beijing with "a number of consensus", hailed by both sides.