The Philippine Star

Inter-agency body vows intensifie­d crackdown on counterfei­t products

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The National Committee on Intellectu­al Property Rights (NCIPR) has vowed to intensify its crackdown on fake goods, warning vendors against selling counterfei­t products.

The inter-agency body is embarking on a broader and coordinate­d government campaign to crack down on vendors, distributo­rs, and sources of counterfei­t and pirated goods in Metro Manila.

The campaign will be elevated and intensifie­d from informatio­n disseminat­ion to eventual confiscati­on in the following months in other hotbeds of counterfei­t and pirated goods in Metro

NCIPR conducted last Friday a surprise inspection on a well-known San Juan marketplac­e where it issued notices to vendors, reminding them to comply with intellectu­al property-related laws.

“Selling fake goods is illegal. Activities in violation of the intellectu­al property-related laws are not only the concern of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) and the Intellectu­al Property Office of the Philippine­s (IPOPHL). This is taken as a serious matter by all agencies involved in curtailing the illicit trade of counterfei­t and pirated products,” IPOPHL director general Josephine Santiago said.

NCIPR is chaired by the DTI, with the IPOPHL serving as its vice chair. Other members are the Department of Justice, Department of the Interior and Local Government, Bureau of Customs, National Telecommun­ications Commission, National Bureau of Investigat­ion, Philippine National Police, Optical Media Board, National Book Developmen­t Board, Food and Drug Administra­tion, and the Office of the Special Envoy on Transnatio­nal Crime.

IPOPHL deputy director general Teodoro Pascua cited the need to focus on local piracy hubs as these have already become known tourist spots in the country.

“Through a resolution agreed on by NCIPR agencies in March, there will be regular inspection­s of these hubs, with the end goal of making physical marketplac­es intellectu­alproperty compliant,” he said.

Pascua said implementi­ng a holistic approach to the enforcemen­t of intellectu­al property rights could lead to a domino effect of uncovering other infraction­s.

In the inspection of counterfei­t goods, he said other illicit activities of the business-owner can be exposed such as the improper payment of Customs duties and income taxes.

With the Bureau of Customs and the Bureau of Internal Revenue involved in the NCIPR, the process of apprehendi­ng perpetrato­rs could be expedited, Pascua said.

“The sale of counterfei­t goods and services crowds out the space for legitimate goods emanating from micro, small, and medium scale producers or emerging businesses,” Pascua said.

NCIPR earlier reported that some P8.2 billion worth of counterfei­t and pirated goods were seized by he inter-agency body last year, the biggest haul by the government since 2014.

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