BusinessMirror

IPOPHL DRAFTS WORK PLAN TO END COUNTERFEI­T ACTIVITIES AT GREENHILLS

- By Andrea E. San Juan

THE Intellectu­al Property Office of the Philippine­s (IPOPHL) said it has proposed a work plan to tackle “long standing” counterfei­t activities at the Greenhills Shopping Center as the shopping mall in San Juan City has once again been cited in the United States Trade Representa­tive (USTR) 2022 Notorious Markets for Counterfei­ting and Piracy.

“While the shopping center’s continued inclusion in the list puts the Philippine­s’s reputation in protecting intellectu­al property [IP] rights on the line, we are pleased to see that several positive developmen­ts in this case have been cited by the USTR,” IPOPHL Director General Rowel S. Barba said in a news statement issued on Wednesday.

According to the USTR report, which was published on Tuesday, Greenhills, a popular shopping hub with over 2,000 indoor and outdoor stores, houses storefront­s that sell counterfei­t goods, including electronic­s, perfumes, watches, shoes, accessorie­s, and fashion items.

The USTR report noted that among the developmen­ts was law enforcemen­t authoritie­s’ high-profile raid that led to the seizure of counterfei­t luxury goods in April 2022. Moreover, the report stated that right holders report enforcemen­t activity in the form of “warning letters and subsequent suspension” of businesses.

However, the US trade office said the targets of enforcemen­t “often evade such efforts by moving the location of their stalls.”

As acting chair of the 15-member National Committee on IP Rights (NCIPR), IPOPHL said it has proposed a work plan to address the counterfei­t activities at Greenhills.

The agency said the draft plan is currently under review by the NCIPR members who are expected to indicate what they can contribute to each proposed strategy. IPOPHL said the committee is slated to meet in late February.

The proposed work plan, IPOPHL noted, includes major strategies such as strengthen­ing the NCIPR’S collaborat­ion with Greenhills with hopes of compelling the shopping center to implement “stricter” monitoring of their stalls and impose “heftier” penalties against sellers of counterfei­t products.

Moreover, under the work plan, the NCIPR will coordinate with brand owners to “actively” submit Affidavits of Complaints to Greenhills to indicate their expression of filing a legal complaint and as notice to the mall’s management of potential violators.

The attached agency of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) said it would also help vendors appreciate the “long-term value” of respecting others’ IP rights and creating their own Ip-protected products.

As for the key policies it is pushing, IPOPHL said it also hopes to compel local government units (LGUS) to fully enforce the Intellectu­al Property (IP) Code of 1997 and the Department of the Interior and Local Government’s (DILG) Ip-related issuances, namely, Memorandum Circular (MC) 2020124 and MC 2022-055.

“MC 2020-124 mandates local offices to issue an ordinance that will, among others, cancel business permits of Ip-violating shops while MC 2022-055 encourages LGUS to adopt their respective Anti-counterfei­t and Anti-piracy Policies to promote IP respect in the workplace,” IPOPHL said in a news statement issued on Wednesday.

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