From Positive News Media
IPR Committee hauls in pirated goods valued at P5 billion
By
Dec 14, 2007 - 2:54:34 PM
MANILA,
Dec. 16 (PNA) -- The National Committee for Intellectual Property
Rights (NCIPR) reported Friday that member agencies engaged in IPR
enforcement have seized P5.25 billion worth of pirated items since its
creation in 2005. Seized goods for the year (as of November)
contributed P2.75 billion to the total value.
The
Intellectual Property Office of the Philippines (IP Philippines), the
lead coordinator of inter-agency efforts against piracy and
counterfeiting, gathered reports from the enforcement groups namely,
the Bureau of Customs (BoC), the National Bureau of Investigation
(NBI), the Optical Media Board (OMB), and the Philippine National
Police (PNP).
BoC
seized a total of P2.21 billion for the two-year period followed by OMB
with P1.79 billion. NBI confiscated P692 million worth of fake goods
while the PNP contributed P565 million to the total figure. Since the
creation of NCIPR in 2005, total enforcement figures have been on a
steady rise. In 2005, the enforcement agencies hauled in P1.14 billion,
and in 2006, the total value was P1.35 billion.
“IP
enforcement and institutional capacity-building are part of our
two-pronged approach in strengthening the IPR regime of the country.
This approach is one of eight sectors identified in the Philippine IP
Policy Strategy, which we recently submitted to President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo,” Atty. Adrian S. Cristobal, Jr., Director General of
IP Philippines, said. “Fake products,” he added, “threaten public
health and safety. These also compete unfairly with legitimate
businesses, cheat government of taxes, and weaken inventor confidence
in our economy.”
“More
than enforcement or the raids conducted for pirated intellectual
property products, a sound IP environment of the country means tapping
the creativity of the Filipinos, and to ensure that the IP system
promotes innovation,” the Director General disclosed.
IP
Philippines spearheaded the crafting of the Philippine IP Policy
Strategy to foster a competitive and creative Philippines that uses IP
as a strategic tool for national development, which is the vision of
the office for the country.
Institutional
capacity building and IP enforcement form part of the eight sectors in
the policy strategy: public health; patent reform; universities, and
research and development institutions (RDI); biodiversity and genetic
resources; indigenous knowledge, systems and practices (IKSP),
folklore, and geographical indications; small- and medium-sized
enterprises (SME) and; copyright and other creative industries. (PNA)
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