BEIJING, Aug. 13 (Xinhua) -- China expressed regret
Thursday over a World Trade Organization ruling against its regulations on the
import and distribution of books and audio-visual products.
The decision by a
WTO dispute panel to uphold a United States' appeal on those regulations was
regrettable, said Yao Jian, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Commerce.
His statement follows the panel's officially
distributing the report to WTO members on Wednesday.
The United States brought a complaint to the global
trade watchdog in April, 2007 saying China was not providing enough access for
imports of publications. The case involves publications such as books and
newspapers, audio and video products including CDs, DVDs and games, and music
downloading services.
"China has always fulfilled its obligations on market
access for publications and the channels for foreign publications, films and
audio-visual products entering Chinese market are extremely open," said Yao.
China has imported approximately 500,000 titles of
publications of all kinds every year since joining the WTO in 2001, as promised
in its entry agreement.
"China will evaluate the panel's report and has not
ruled out the possibility of appealing the ruling," he said.