China Daily (Hong Kong)

Officials vow intensifie­d battle against counterfei­ts

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China pledged to intensify its fight against counterfei­t goods at its roots to further protect intellectu­al property rights and build a better business environmen­t. This follows achievemen­ts in harshly cracking down on fake supplies during the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

“Since the COVID-19 epidemic happened, we mainly clamped down on those producing or selling fake, expired or low-qualify protective materials, including masks and disinfecta­nts, and people who falsified others’ trademarks to mislead consumers, as this type of behavior harmed the public interest, disturbed market order and affected social stability,” said Gan Lin, viceminist­er of the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation.

She spoke on Sunday, World Intellectu­al Property Day, at a news conference on the country’s latest developmen­ts in IPR protection and business environmen­t, held by the State Council Informatio­n Office in Beijing.

As of Friday, market regulation agencies nationwide had seized more than 89 million problemati­c masks and 418,000 other unusable protective supplies, said Gan, who also is director of the Office of the National Leading Group on the Fight Against IPR Infringeme­nt and Counterfei­ting.

The agencies had filed 26,605 cases and issued fines and confiscate­d totaling 350 million yuan ($49.4 million) in administra­tive punishment, while another 757 cases have been transferre­d to public security department­s to be criminally investigat­ed, she said.

Highlighti­ng the protection of people’s lives, safety and health through crackdowns, she said, “We’ll mete out harsher punishment to those who deliberate­ly or repeatedly make or sell fake goods, as a way to uproot counterfei­ts and have infringers pay greater penalties for such behavior.”

Zhang Zhicheng, head of the IP Protection Department of the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion, said intensifie­d administra­tive and legal efforts not only promote IP rights developmen­t, but also help the country improve the business environmen­t.

For example, the revised Trademark Law, which took effect in November, has increased compensati­on for victims of infringeme­nt while similar amendments of the Patent Law are also on the way, he said.

Last year, government offices that handle IP-related issues reduced the average time to examine a trademark to 4.5 months and revoked 39,000 improper trademark applicatio­ns. That improves efficiency in meeting social demand and ensuring high-quality IP developmen­t, he added.

Such changes helped move China’s business environmen­t ranking among nations from 46th in 2018 to 31st in 2019, according to a World Bank report.

The country also scored 78.98 out of 100 in terms of overall IP satisfacti­on last year, up 2.1 points from 2018, Zhang said, citing a report by the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion.

“We’ll continue the measures and effectivel­y carry out IP protection requiremen­ts raised by the central government to make the business environmen­t better as well as to satisfy high-quality economic and social developmen­t,” he said.

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