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COSON warns Senate against passing bad Executive Copyright Bill

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COSON warns senate against passing bad Executive Copyright Bill

 

The Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON) has written the president of the senate, Ahmad Lawan, warning against passage of the new Executive Copyright Bill currently before the senate.

COSON, Nigeria’s biggest copyright collective management organisation, in its letter, faulted the process and procedure of trying to pass the bill.

In the four-page letter signed by the COSON Chairman and former President of PMAN, Chief Tony Okoroji, the society said that it was very clear that the Senate was being stampeded to pass a very dangerous bill infested with many bad and anti-democratic provisions that would stifle the growth of creativity in Nigeria and damage the Nigerian economy.

“The bill if passed into law, will turn Nigerian musicians, authors, film makers, computer programmers, publishers and the many creatives who depend on a good copyright system into the slaves of a few civil servants at the Nigerian Copyright Commission.

“If Section 39 of the bill becomes law, in a supposed democracy, no copyright owner in Nigeria who negotiates or grants a licence for the use of his work, will be able to exercise his constitutional right of going to court anymore to enforce his rights, except he gets the permission of civil servants at the Nigerian Copyright Commission!

“There are countless provisions in the bill giving the Nigerian Copyright Commission and its personnel such powers and privileges not possessed by any other government agency. A lot of these provisions are not in line with diverse public service rules. Indeed, in so many situations, the Nigerian Copyright Commission has put itself in the place of the owners of copyright to take decisions on behalf of the copyright owners which decisions are business decisions ordinarily taken by the owners of copyright or their agents,” the letter stated.

READ: Court summons Police IG, EFCC, DSS over harassment of COSON officials

According to COSON, the NCC neither had the competence, the staff, the technology, the lack of bias nor had it shown over time that it had the slightest capacity to exercise the powers it was hoping to grab, warning that the result will be utter confusion and frustration.

The letter said that under Section 104 (2) of the bill, no one can bring any action against the Commission or any member of its staff on any matter whatsoever, whether private or official, except a three-month written notice of intention to commence the suit is served upon the Commission by the intending plaintiff or his agent. This sort of privilege and protection, COSON said, no government official or even any of Nigeria’s senators enjoys.

Also, under Section 100 of the bill, if any citizen gets a judgment against the Commission, no execution or attachment of process can be issued against the Commission, unless prior to such execution, not less than three months’ notice of the intention to execute or attach had been given to the Commission.

COSON complained that it received for the first time by email the 88-page document with 109 sections, only three working days before the scheduled Public Hearing which incidentally is holding on October 12, the same day that COSON is holding a major event in Lagos to celebrate the life and times of Prof (Sir) Victor Uwaifo, one of Nigeria’s greatest creative geniuses of all times, who died on August 28 and will be buried this week.

READ: COSON announces N50m COVID-19 relief fund for musicians

The letter also pointed out that under Section 87 of the bill, Nigeria would start a new regime of the registration of copyright, which COSON said was “a totally unnecessary and anachronistic adventure and a very bad move”.

According to COSON, “Reading through the document, it is clear that it was drafted by Civil Servants with definite self-serving agenda and academics with very little copyright industry experience.

“The contradictions and conflicts in the document are fundamental and not such that can be repaired by any panel beating. Indeed, the Head of Service of the Federation needs to look at the document to expunge the many anti-Public Service proposals. A very transparent process in which the true stakeholders are on the table needs to be commenced if the intent is not to suppress Nigeria’s creative output and kill our copyright industries.

“For the good of the Nigerian nation and posterity and not to make Nigeria the laughing stock of the world, the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is requested not to put its imprimatur on the terrible piece of legislation known as the ‘Executive Copyright Bill’,” the society warned.

My friends at NCC are simply doing their job!

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