World Chambers Congress
Business outlines plan to fight theft of intellectual property
World business leaders today urged governments to allocate substantially greater attention and resources to combat the rapidly growing rate of piracy of intellectual property rights and production of counterfeit goods.
In a statement issued by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), business also expressed profound concern over recent Interpol reports that piracy and counterfeiting are increasingly being used to fund organized crime and other international criminal networks.
The statement was issued in Marrakesh, Morocco, where more than 800 leaders of government and business from 86 countries are gathered on the occasion of the ICC’s 35th World Congress, taking place from 6 to 9 June.
The value of counterfeited and pirated goods is estimated at over 500 billion euro annually and is escalating rapidly, the statement said.
“Copyright, trademark and design industries are particularly affected by IP theft, but virtually no industry is untouched by this illegal activity. Food and beverages, pharmaceuticals, electrical appliances, watches, cigarettes and cosmetics are all popular targets of counterfeiters; and music, movies, video games, software and other copyrighted digital content are also being pirated”, the statement said.
To counter this growing scourge, action needs to be taken in all countries and at all levels of the supply chain through which illegitimate products are produced, distributed and consumed, the ICC said.
The three-page statement made specific recommendations including:
- International
implementation of current WIPO, WTO and other multilateral intellectual
property rights agreements. - Strengthening
and/or creation of national legal frameworks to ensure implementation and
effective enforcement measures against copyright piracy and trademark
counterfeiting. - Closer,
more effective cooperation between business and government in formulating
policies to upgrade enforcement measures. - More
effective enforcement of existing laws. - Industry
and government cooperation in conducting training and awareness-building
programs for customs, police and judiciary officials. - Government
and industry sponsored education campaigns and media coverage to help raise
public awareness of the benefits of IP protection and the ill-effects of piracy
and counterfeiting. - Improved
data collection and sharing by government, industry and multilateral
institutions. - Improved
exchange between industry sectors, associations and governments of anti-piracy
and anti-counterfeiting best practices.