The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China’s Supreme Court to take on intellectu­al property cases

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BEIJING: Intellectu­al property rights cases can from next month be taken to China’s Supreme Court, the government said, as the country seeks to strengthen protection­s in the face of complaints from the United States about the issue.

China and the United States are currently in talks to resolve a trade dispute, in which both countries have put tariffs on imports of each other’s products.

The US, along with the European Union, have long complained about poor enforcemen­t of intellectu­al property rights in China, and this has been a key complaint of the Trump administra­tion, along with forced technology transfers and a yawning trade gap.

Beijing in response has been seeking to show that it is serious about addressing US concerns.

Deputy chief justice Luo Dongchuan told a news conference that from January 1 the Supreme Court would begin handling appeals on intellectu­al property rights cases, whereas previously only provincial-level high courts would handle them.

“Setting up a Supreme Court intellectu­al property rights court is an important decision by the Communist Party, is a major step to strengthen the legal protection of intellectu­al property rights and will have a major impact at home and abroad.”

Luo did not directly answer a question about how the US should view the move and what it said about China’s efforts to protect intellectu­al property, saying that such protection was a “basic national policy”.

“China is already the world’s second largest economy, and in the future China’s developmen­t will rely on innovation. The protection of innovation needs there to be legal protection for intellectu­al property rights.” — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A Chinese national flag flutters near a minaret of the ancient Id Kah Mosque in the Old City in Kashgar in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, China. Intellectu­al property rights cases can from next month be taken to China’s Supreme Court, the government said, as the country seeks to strengthen protection­s in the face of complaints from the United States about the issue.
— Reuters photo A Chinese national flag flutters near a minaret of the ancient Id Kah Mosque in the Old City in Kashgar in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, China. Intellectu­al property rights cases can from next month be taken to China’s Supreme Court, the government said, as the country seeks to strengthen protection­s in the face of complaints from the United States about the issue.

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