About 100 Chinese music celebrities gathered at Beijing's
Capital Stadium Saturday night standing on a huge CD-shape platform
and singing for public support in the country's fight against
rampant music piracy. The stadium was nearly full, and organizers
said 150 million more watched on television. Pop stars sang their
hit songs and occasionally urged their fans not to buy pirated
products. Organized by the central government and associations in
entertainment circles, the concert was just one of a series
anti-piracy events going on in Beijing Saturday, aiming to show
officials' and entertainers' determination to hit hard on piracy.
Events included a forum, a Beijing anti-piracy declaration and a
public destruction of pirated products.
"If Beijing fails to solve piracy soon, we will not deserve to
host the Olympics in 2008," said Feng Xiaogang, a Chinese director
who was recently named the country's proponent of copyright
protection.
"This is not exaggerating," said Wang Ziqiang, spokesman of
National Copyright Administration, or the state copyright
watchdog." Rampant piracy harms people's creativity, and a nation
without creativity is a nation without hope."
He said that despite repeated government crackdowns,
intellectual property infringement is still rampant in China. "We
don't know when the problem can not solved, but we do know China
will take the challenge."
Yan Xiaohong, vice chief of the administration, said they had
set "fewer complaints, more action" as the guideline for IPR
protection in 2005. "China will absolutely fulfill its commitments
to the world," he said.
In the morning, three truckloads of confiscated books, tapes,
DVDs, CDs, and computer discs were dumped on a red carpet and
publicly smashed to pieces. Copyright officials and people from
entertainment circles were invited to destroy the pirated products.
Last year copyright administrations across China confiscated about
85.05 million pirated products, 25 percent more than that in2003,
and China's judicial authorities lowered the legal threshold to
criminalize IPR violators. People who sell more than 5,000pirated
CDs might end up seven years behind bars, authorities have
said.
"Though the government and justice departments work hard to
stamp out piracy, we cannot win the battle against IPR infringement
without public support," Yan said, adding that the public's
anti-piracy awareness needs to be raised. Audience of the concert
corresponded what Yan had said." A copyrighted CD for 200 yuan
(US$24.2), pirated one for 10 yuan (US$1.21), what will you buy?"
-- someone on stage asked. "The pirated one," answered the
thousands of people in the stadium.
"What I want to do is to repeatedly promote the use of
copyrighted things," said Feng, adding that if all Chinese watch
pirated movies, Chinese films are doomed to be barred from the
world's market.
Yan said his administration is going to hold large-scale IPR
knowledge promotion in middle schools across China early this
summer.
2005 is a good chance for China to upgrade its IPR protection,
he said. "We will take advantage of that to help the public to
raise their anti-piracy awareness."
(Xinhua News Agency February 26, 2005)