BEIJING, May 16 (Xinhua) -- China and the United
States will hold talks on the protection of intellectual property and market
access of publications in China from June 5 to 8, said Wang Xinpei, spokesman
for the Ministry of Commerce on Wednesday.
The Chinese delegation to the World Trade
Organization formally accepted the request from the U.S. to hold talks on these
issues on April 20, and both sides agreed to meet in Geneva next month, Wang
said at a regular news conference.
The United States filed two WTO complaints against
China over copyright piracy and restrictions on the sale of U.S. books, music,
videos and movies on April 10, maintaining that piracy levels in China "remain
unacceptably high."
The Chinese government expressed "great regret and
strong dissatisfaction" over the U.S. action on the same day, saying the
decision runs contrary to the consensus between leaders of the two nations on
strengthening bilateral trade ties and properly solving trade disputes.
The new cases were reported to be aimed at easing
"rising political anger over America's soaring trade deficit", as some U.S.
officials believed American companies were losing billions of dollars every year
due to piracy in China.
Wang Xinpei said the ministry would put 276 measures
into practice to better protect IPR as stated in a recently published action
plan, while iterating the Chinese government's dedication to protecting
intellectual property.
China will draft or revise 14 laws and regulations
regarding trademarks, copyright and patents in 2007, according to the plan.
Fourteen anti-piracy campaigns to enforce the laws
and regulations are expected this year, Wang said.
The Chinese government confiscated more than 73
million pirated products, including 18 million pirated books, 1.1 million
periodicals, 48 million audio-visual products, 2.01 million electronic
publications and 3.79 million software discs last year.
In a recent move, China's Supreme People's Court said
anyone who manufactures 500 or more counterfeit copies (discs) of computer
software, music, movies, TV shows and other audio-video products can be
prosecuted and face a prison term of up to three years. Previously the limit was
1,000 pirated discs.