Friday, March 04, 2011

The lizard's weekly China news roundup

IP Komodo hears righteous indignation expressed by bosses at Beijing's famous Silk Market on Wednesday at a United States trade report that accuses the mall of being "notorious" for fake goods. A Ms Hu stated to the press “I don't care about what any other media is saying about (the Silk Market). We're doing our best to fight against fake goods." 80 percent of Silk Market patrons are tourists. "The guilt for fake goods is shared between the buyer and the seller," she added. During a crackdown in October 2009, authorities found copies of Gucci, Coach and Adidas ready available and the raid led to the arrest of the mall's then-manager Wang Zili, who was charged with allowing the sale of fake goods and taking bribes. IP Komodo would like to hear from anyone who has visited the market in 2011.

Meanwhile in Guangzhou the sale of counterfeit products thrives: China-Africa Commercial Plaza has been required to close after authorities investigated and seized more than 7,600 products, including watches, garments, bags, sneakers, perfumes, cell phones, notebook computers and small household appliances - fake brand names included Rolex, Rado, Citizen, Swatch, LV, Gucci, Hugo Boss, Dior, Polo, Nokia, Sony, Burberry and Apple. Investigators looked into the sales of the counterfeit products on Feb 20 and 21. Fourteen stores in the plaza were believed to have infringed IPRs.

China's food and drug watchdog Tuesday vowed a "ruthless" crackdown on the production and sales of substandard health foods and cosmetics this year. Bian Zhenjia, deputy director of the State Food and Drug Administration said at a national conference that despite stepped-up supervision on the sector last year, the country's health food and cosmetics markets still faced many quality problems. IP Komodo notes a similar problem in his home in Indonesia where echoing the problem in China a couple of years back, a tainted milk scandal has Indonesian consumers panicking over food safety.

WIPO will be delighted at this: Chinese lawmakers on Wednesday began reviewing a revised draft law on the country's intangible cultural heritage (or to give it an acronym ICH). The draft law was submitted to the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, China's top legislature, for its third reading. This is the first attempt by China to enact a law that safeguards heritage of historical, literary, artistic or scientific value. IP Komodo senses endless seminar opportunities.

Guest post by IP Komodo Dragon

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Being a French lawyer settled in China, I find your blog and articles very interesting. I am actually helping a important French company to cope and combat counterfeiting in China.
For the people interested, you can check our website: ;
or even register you trademark worldwide online: !

Keep on blogging...