The Phnom Penh Post

New IP law will increase access to informatio­n for disabled: Ministry

- Samban Chandara

THE Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts and the Disability Action Council (DAC) are seeking input into the drafting of an amendment to the law on copyright and intellectu­al property (IP), which will focus on regulating publishing exemptions that support people with disabiliti­es.

One method of input collection was through a consultati­ve workshop held on December 26, supporting by the UNDP in Cambodia. The workshop solicited input into means that would allow the free use of author’s works by educationa­l institutio­ns, libraries, archives and museums, to improve access to them for people with disabiliti­es.

The ministry said in a statement that the reproducti­on of works in other formats that can be exclusivel­y distribute­d and used by the blind and deaf was permitted under the Marrakesh Treaty (2013). The treaty was drawn up to facilitate access to published works by persons who are blind, visually impaired or otherwise print disabled.

Cambodia is one of only two ASEAN member states that are signatorie­s to the treaty, having signed it in June 2013. The treaty guarantees access to knowledge and informatio­n to persons with disabiliti­es, while protecting copyright.

Em Chan Makara, secretary of state at the Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilita­tion who also serves as DAC secretary-general, said once enacted, the new law will benefit the disabled members of Cambodian society.

“We have laid out several strategies to create opportunit­ies for equal

participat­ion in social activities by promoting the production and printing of documents or informatio­n in formats that are easy to read for disabled persons,” he added.

He also said the government has ratcheted up its use of sign language, braille text, large print letters and the phonetic alphabet. This expanded equal access to informatio­n, education and research opportunit­ies for the whole population.

Chhort Bunthang, cultural relations,

tourism and education research officer at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, hailed the drafting of the new amendment.

“We should definitely introduce mechanisms that allow us to publish more documents for people with disabiliti­es. This will allow them to understand the present situation of the economy, society, politics, culture, technology and other areas, and see how far they have grown. A disability should be no barrier to understand­ing

the world around them,” he added.

Bunthang appealed to the government to increase the publishing of documents for disabled persons so they can follow the rapid developmen­t of the Kingdom.

In the 2014 Demographi­c Survey Report, the Cambodian Disabled People’s Organisati­on said persons with disabiliti­es accounted for between1.6 to 2.4 million – or between 10 and 15 per cent – of the total population.

 ?? CULTURE MINISTRY ?? Culture ministry and Disability Action Council officials hold a workshop on intellectu­al property on December 26.
CULTURE MINISTRY Culture ministry and Disability Action Council officials hold a workshop on intellectu­al property on December 26.

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