What would you do with €1 trillion? That's the amount of taxes lost to fraud and evasion in Europe: €2,000 per citizen per year. Read more about how Parliament...(read more) Facebook
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Whose money should be used to prop up failing banks? Shareholders' money and not that of small depositors - believes Parliament's economic committee. Read...(read more) Facebook
What do you and the person in this picture have in common? You're both just a mouse-click away from following the plenary live! Click here:...(read more) Facebook Pirated and counterfeit products cost European businesses €250 billion a year and some pose a risk to health and safety. One way to protect EU markets and consumers is to prevent them from entering the EU and customs authorities are best placed to do that. On Monday 2 July MEPs discussed a report by German Liberal Jürgen Creutzmann on how to strengthen customs enforcement of intellectual property rights.
"Large parts of the economic growth and jobs in the EU depend on the effective enforcement of intellectual property rights...customs authorities are in a comparatively good position to enforce" them, Creutzmann says.
The new rules would set down procedures enabling customs authorities to stop suspected goods, but deciding what infringes intellectual property rules would continue to be defined by EU and national legislation.
The Commission proposal extends the scope of the rules to include illegal parallel trade (trade in goods not approved by the rights holder through unapproved channels) and lookalike trade marks.
It also proposes that people receiving small postal consignments of counterfeit goods would be given the option of agreeing to their destruction without having to pay the costs of storage and destruction. The EP report wants small consignments to be defined as less than 3 items, weighing less than 2 kilos and contained in one package. It also wants the customer to have a say before the goods are destroyed.
The EP report also expresses concern that the measures could hamper the legitimate trade in generic drugs between non-EU countries and stresses that intellectual property legislation applies only to goods being delivered in the EU and not to goods transiting through Europe.
It also calls for a Commission analysis of the effectiveness of current customs measures aimed at combating trade in falsified medicines.
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Newsletter - 2-5 July 2012 - Strasbourg plenary session
Opening: EU patent law postponed, concern about developments in Paraguay
Customs needs better tools to enforce intellectual property rights
"Name and shame member states dragging their feet over animal welfare" - MEP Marit Paulsen
Life-saving emergency eCall system should be mandatory, say MEPs
European Council: MEPs warn new laws need to be adopted soon in order to overcome crisis
ACTA debate: MEPs disagree about the best way forward
David Martin on ACTA: law negotiated in secret is usually bad law
European Parliament rejects ACTA
2013 budget: MEPs call on governments to negotiate responsibly
Eurozone crisis: not just roadmaps but legislation needed by September
EP wants access to basic banking services for all
MEPs call on Commission to do more to defend free movement
pirated, counterfeit goods cost EU business €250 billion a year
14.5% of detained articles in 2010 for daily use (foods, beverages, body care, medicines, electrical household goods, toys)
customs registered 43,572 cases (118 million articles) of counterfeiting, piracy in 2009
79,112 cases of counterfeiting and piracy registered by customs in 2010
Sharp rise in counterfeit and pirated goods shipped by post via online sales