BEIJING, April 24 -- A senior official Monday
fought back at Western countries that seek to condemn China for violations of
intellectual property rights, while ignoring the huge strides the country has
made in strengthening IPR protection.
"It is not right for them to observe China while
wearing blinkers," Tian Lipu, commissioner of the State Intellectual Property
Office said in an online interview with www.gov.cn in Beijing.
The government's attitude toward intellectual
property rights protection has always been resolute, and its achievements are
obvious to all, he said.
As a condition of its entry into the World Trade
Organization, China has, since 2000, been carrying out a complete revision of
its laws and regulations relating to IPR protection to ensure they comply with
international conventions.
Last year, the country formally joined the World
Intellectual Property Organization Copyright Treaty and the WIPO Performances
and Phonograms Treaty.
On July 1, 2006, it also implemented regulations on
the protection of the right of communication through information networks.
To date it has completed three revisions of its
patent law.
From December 2004 to spring 2007, the country has
organized numerous special crackdown campaigns on IPR infringements.
During the seven special crackdowns last year, security departments
filed 863 cases and arrested 988 suspects, while the courts handled 6,441
IPR cases. Patent, customs and industry and commerce departments dealt with
17,243 such cases involving nearly 1 billion yuan (129.5 million U.S. dollars).
Liu Zhengang, head of the Beijing IPR bureau, said
that in the capital, for example, pirate DVD vendors have now been forced
underground, where they were once able to operate openly and in public.
In another development, Supreme People's Court
Vice-President Cao Jianming called on Western countries to choose dialogue
instead of confrontation when dealing with IPR-related trade disputes and
differences.
In December and April, the apex court and Supreme
People's Procuratorate jointly promulgated two judicial interpretations to
impose heavier criminal punishments for IPR violations.
"China has enacted more extensive accusatory
imputations toward IPR violations than many other countries," Cao said.
"The extent and scope of judicial punishments are
severe, and proceedings are complete too."
Cao made the remarks on Thursday in Shanghai during a
seminar on movie copyright protection, which was attended by more than 60 senior
IPR judges from across China and Motion Picture Association of America.
(Source: China Daily)