Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
BEIJING, June 14 (Xinhua) -- China's market
supervisors detected 428 violations of the Beijing Olympics logos last year, up
45 percent from 2005, according to the State Administration of Industry and
Commerce (SAIC).
The administration would not disclose details, but
one case involved two Beijing companies that fraudulently took application fees
from firms wanting to be considered as the "most valuable brand names" by the
organizing committee of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Their scam has been listed
among the top 10 "typical IPR violation cases" in 2006.
An SAIC statement said the 10 cases were selected
from 192 trademark infringement cases referred to public security departments
last year and involved well-known trademarks such as Nike, Adidas, Puma, Nokia,
Sony Ericsson, Chivas, Regal, Martell, Hennessy, Lacoste and Philips.
The SAIC and its local branches had planned to target
69 Olympic logos under legal protection including "Fuwa", the official Mascots,
the emblems for the Beijing 2008 Olympics and Paralympics Games, Beijng's
Olympic slogan and the symbol of the Olympic torch relay.
From 2004 to 2006, the SAIC has dealt with 1,128 such
infringement cases involving 14.89 million yuan (1.95 million U.S.dollars) and
imposed 8.38 million yuan (1.16 million U.S. dollars)in fines.
The trademark logos are owned by the Beijing
Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (BOCOG), and only authorized
companies are allowed to manufacture products bearing Olympic logos.
On June 1, Hong Kong Customs raided seven market
stalls, seizing about 350 items bearing Olympic logos, including key rings,
watches, caps, badges and stickers, worth about 7,000 HK dollars (897 U.S.
dollars).
The BOCOG has warned that genuine products should
have anti-counterfeiting labels and certificates of examination and be sold at
licensed retail outlets.
The SAIC has dealt with 193,332 cases of trademark
infringement, including 28,041 cases related to foreign trademarks, since the
country's entry into World Trade Organization in 2001.
