China's Supreme Court to take on
intellectual property cases
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[December 29, 2018]
BEIJING (Reuters) - Intellectual
property rights cases can from next month be taken to China's Supreme
Court, the government said on Saturday, as the country seeks to
strengthen protections in the face of complaints from the United States
about the issue.
China and the United States are currently in talks to resolve a trade
dispute, in which both countries have put tariffs on imports of each
other's products.
The United States, along with the European Union, have long complained
about poor enforcement of intellectual property rights in China, and
this has been a key complaint of the Trump administration, along with
forced technology transfers and a yawning trade gap.
Beijing in response has been seeking to show that it is serious about
addressing U.S. concerns.
Deputy chief justice Luo Dongchuan told a news conference that from Jan.
1 the Supreme Court would begin handling appeals on intellectual
property rights cases, whereas previously only provincial-level high
courts would handle them.
"Setting up a Supreme Court intellectual property rights court is an
important decision by the Communist Party, is a major step to strengthen
the legal protection of intellectual property rights and will have a
major impact at home and abroad."
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A Chinese national flag flutters near a minaret of the ancient Id
Kah Mosque in the Old City in Kashgar in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous
Region, China September 6, 2018. Picture taken September 6, 2018. To
match Special Report MUSLIMS-CAMPS/CHINA REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Luo did not directly answer a question about how the United States
should view the move and what it said about China's efforts to
protect intellectual property, saying that such protection was a
"basic national policy".
"China is already the world's second largest economy, and in the
future China's development will rely on innovation. The protection
of innovation needs there to be legal protection for intellectual
property rights."
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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