http://www.wipo.int/edocs/prdocs/en/2003/wipo_upd_2003_213.htm
Geneva, December 1, 2003

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CARIBBEAN GOVERNMENTS COMMIT TO USING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
AS A TOOL FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Governments of several Caribbean countries have committed to use
intellectual property as a tool to promote sustainable economic
development and social welfare in the region with the signature of a
landmark multilateral agreement with the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO) last week. At the WIPO Ministeral Level Meeting on
Intellectual Property for Caribbean Countries organized in cooperation
with the Ministry of Justice and Legal Affairs of Antigua and Barbuda at
St. John's on November 27 and 28, ministers signed a comprehensive
cooperation agreement to promote the use of intellectual property (IP) as
a tool for economic growth and social benefit. The meeting was opened by
WIPO Director General Dr. Kamil Idris and the Prime Minister and Minister
of Justice and Legal Affairs of Antigua and Barbuda, Mr. Lester B. Bird..
The governments of Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize,
Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint
Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago
were invited to participate in the meeting.

The agreement establishes the terms of a project that is designed to
support a more effective integration of the region into the global economy
by fostering technological innovation, creativity and competitiveness
through intensive and effective mobilization and use of intellectual
property.

The project will support on-going regional initiatives for economic
development and integration of IP policies and strategies into government
economic and social development plans at regional and national levels. It
aims to create conditions for the development, protection, ownership,
management and use of IP assets in the region, by fostering technological
innovation and enterprise competitiveness, as well as cultural industries.
The project will also promote technology transfer, strengthen regional
research and development initiatives, encourage local invention and
creativity, promote an IP culture and national and regional identity and
branding.

The participating governments so far include, Antigua and Barbuda,
Barbados, Dominica, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia,
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago.
It is expected that other governments in the region will sign the
agreement in the next three months.

On the sidelines of the ministerial meeting, Dr. Idris held a round of
bilateral discussions with a number of senior officials within the
government of Antigua and Barbuda, including the Governor General of
Antigua and Barbuda, Sir James B. Carlisle, the Speaker of the House, Dame
Bridget Harris, President of the Senate, Ms. Millicent Percival, the
Minister of Education, Dr. Rodney Williams, the Minister for Trade, Mr.
Gaston Browne and the Minister of Tourism, Mr. Molwyn Joseph.

The ministerial event followed a meeting of the heads of IP offices for
Caribbean countries which met in Saint John's on November 25 and 26. At
that meeting, participants reviewed progress made in establishing a set of
independent, national organizations to manage intellectual property rights
in the Caribbean region in line with the plan approved by Caribbean
ministers in June 1999. Under the plan, it was agreed to incorporate a
regional strategy for the development of a collective management system
whereby national collective management organizations would be established
and linked by standard internet facilities to a separate,
jointly-owned-and-operated-organization (the Caribbean Copyright Link
(CCL)) that would provide back-office services to the national offices.

Participants noted that after two years of operation, all existing
national collective management organizations (CMOs) in the region were
fully operational and were making good overall progress both from a
regional and a national perspective. It was noted that since 2001, the
cumulative total gross royalty distributions have risen to USD1.879
million. The Caribbean regional database now includes documentation on
more than 26,000 Caribbean works. This database enables Caribbean music to
be identified and accounted for when it is performed in public in the
Caribbean and foreign countries. Emphasis has been placed on entering the
works documentation data and ensuring the necessary agreements are in
place to allow export of the data in the standard international format to
other CMOs worldwide for performance identification purposes. While the
regional database comprising Caribbean works is beginning to generate
royalties for Caribbean authors from performances in the region, Caribbean
CMOs are engaged in the process of signing agreements with their
counterparts in foreign territories to collect royalties from exported
Caribbean works.

More than 300 creators had joined a Caribbean CMO over the last two years.
This indicates a growing level of confidence by creators in their own
organizations. The participants also reported a steady increase in
licensing activity within the region.

WIPO welcomed the progress made and pledged its continued support in
creating and integrating organizations representing the related rights of
performing artists and producers in the region.

For further information, please contact the Media Relations and Public
Affairs Section at WIPO:

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