UN body 'gives poor nations misleading copyright advice' By Frances Williams February 21, 2006 The Financial Times Original Source: http://news.ft.com/cms/s/91a96de6-a27e-11da-9096-0000779e2340.html Poor countries are being wrongly advised to enact tougher copyright laws than required by international treaties, making access to copyright publications prohibitively expensive, Consumers International said yesterday. The non-governmental organisation said all 11 Asian countries it had studied, including China, India and Malaysia, granted copyright owners more protection than needed under global rules, and none provided all the permitted exemptions and flexibilities. As a result, copyrighted educational materials in these countries are expensive and consumers are being priced out of access to knowledge, said a CI report. A book costing $27 (£15) in Indonesia was equivalent to a US student paying more than $1,000 in GDP-per-capita terms. The London-based group, which links more than 230 consumer organisations in 113 countries, said the United Nations' World Intellectual Property Organisation was giving thoroughly inadequate advice to poor nations. Such countries were already under pressure from the US and other industrialised countries to provide ever stronger copyright protection. Wipo's misleading draft laws were reinforcing this pressure by including rights not required by international treaties and by failing to point out flexibilities, especially those relatingto use of copyright workfor educational purposes. The World Trade Organisation's intellectual property agreement, the Berne Convention and the Wipo Copyright Treaty all have provisions for public access to knowledge. However, the CI study showed, for example, that none of the 11 Asian countries had laws allowing the use of copyright works in educational broadcasts and five unnecessarily restricted the copies that could be used for teaching. Richard Lloyd, CI director-general, said: Schools, universities and libraries need access to affordable teaching and learning materials. Wipo said the agency gave countries a range of options they were free to follow, adapt or ignore.