News || Nigeria Submits Instruments Of Ratification Of 4 Copyright Treaties To WIPO || The Arts-Muse Fair
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Afam Ezekude, D.G, NCC. Photo: COSON |
Nigeria has provided instruments of ratification of four copyright
treaties to the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) in Geneva,
Switzerland, reports the Music in Africa .
These instruments of ratification, which refer to letters signed by a
head of government concerning a treaty,
were delivered to WIPO
director-general Francis Gurry at the 57th general assembly of the
organisation,
which is the “the central hub for global IP [intellectual
property] infrastructure”, on 2 October.
The documents were handed to Gurry by Nigeria’s permanent representative
the UN Office at Geneva (UNOG), Audu Kadiri, and the Director-General
of the Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC), Afam Ezekude.
The handover of the instruments of ratification asserts Nigeria’s
agreement to requirements of the treaties. According to a statement, the
four treaties include “the WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT), the
WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (WPPT), the Beijing Treaty on
Audiovisual Performances and the Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to
Published Works by Visually Impaired Persons and Persons with Print
Disabilities."
The first two treaties are commonly called Internet Treaties. They
represent the push by copyright bodies against intellectual property
problems presented by the Internet. Although presented on 2 October, the
instruments of ratification were signed by President Muhammadu Buhari on 24
August.
“With the ratification of the four treaties, Nigeria is about to witness
a new era in its intellectual property protection policy and legislation,”
Ezekude said. “The development again underscores the urgent need to enact a new
copyright legislation that will implement the standards stipulated in the
treaties.
“The ratification of the treaties affirms Nigeria’s acceptance and its
undertaking to faithfully perform and carry out obligations under the treaties.
Nigeria stands to derive benefits from this instrument when its provisions are
eventually domesticated in the revised copyright bill being proposed by the NCC.”
Gurry said Nigeria's submission of the
documents showed commitment to the protection of performers,
artists and composers.
While Nigeria's endorsement of the treaties is bound to excite the
country's artists and such bodies as the Copyright Society of Nigeria, the process by
which these treaties come into effect is incomplete. The Beijing Treaty, in
particular, which concerns audiovisual materials and was adopted in 2012, requires
instruments of ratification from at least 30 countries. So far, it has been
ratified by about a dozen countries.
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