China Daily

Diplomats defend bid for global IP body chief

- By ZHANG YUNBI in London zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese diplomats have expressed their support for a veteran Chinese official’s bid to become the next chief of the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on.

The candidate representi­ng China for the leadership of the organizati­on is Wang Binying, who now serves as a deputy chief of the world’s top agency promoting intellectu­al property.

Wang’s bid has attracted attention from policymake­rs as China plays a leading role in the number of patent and trademark applicatio­ns in the world.

Ambassador Chen Xu, China’s permanent representa­tive to the United Nations Office at Geneva and other internatio­nal organizati­ons in Switzerlan­d, said at a news conference in Geneva on Wednesday that “it is natural for China, a world-leading patent applicant, to nominate its candidate”, and Wang is “highly competent”.

Born in 1952, Wang obtained a master’s degree in US law including industrial property law at the Law School of the University of California, Berkeley, in 1986.

She started serving the agency in 1992 as senior program officer of its Bureau for Developmen­t Cooperacou­ntries tion for Asia and the Pacific. She became assistant director-general in 2006 and has been deputy director-general since 2009.

In a letter recommendi­ng her as a candidate, State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi wrote in November, “She is entirely able to guide the organizati­on to continue working for a balanced and effective internatio­nal intellectu­al property system”.

“Being a determined woman and good communicat­or, she is able to find the solutions by coordinati­ng the different concerns of member states,” Chen said.

According to the WIPO website, the term of office of Director-General Francis Gurry will expire on Sept 30, and an extraordin­ary session of the WIPO Coordinati­on Committee will convene on March 4 and 5 to nominate a candidate for the top post.

However, the United States is doing all it can to pressure other

to give up their support for the Chinese candidate by threatenin­g to “cut aid and other disgracefu­l means” under the slogan of “anyone but Chinese”, Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters in Beijing on Tuesday.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said on social media on Tuesday: “Stop bullying and politicizi­ng! Make the election fair!”

On Wednesday, Chen said the US had threatened to weaken relations with some small and medium-sized countries if they supported the Chinese candidate, and it warned that they may stand to lose out on loans from the World Bank and the IMF.

“Members of the WIPO Coordinati­on Committee are expected to judge the matter on its own merits, rather than be influenced by political maneuverin­g.

“Such maneuverin­g runs counter to fair competitio­n and will jeopardize the right of sovereign states to make independen­t choices,” Chen said.

China’s bid for the post of head of the organizati­on is aimed at promoting internatio­nal cooperatio­n, and strengthen­ing the protection of intellectu­al property is both China’s internatio­nal obligation and China’s inherent need in order to fulfill its innovation-driven developmen­t strategy and expand its opening-up, Chen said.

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