BEIJING - China sentenced a man to life in jail on Thursday for running what
state media called the country's biggest ever pirate film disc smuggling ring.
A court in southern Guangxi region convicted Lin Yuehua and 11 gang members
of buying five production units to make DVDs and VCDs, setting them up in a
foreign country and smuggling over 30 million bootleg discs into China from 2002
to 2005, the Xinhua news agency reported.
A pirated DVD version of 'The Da Vinci Code' movie is
displayed for sale along a sidewalk in Beijing in this May 22, 2006 file
photo. China sentenced a man to life in jail on Thursday for running what
state media called the country's biggest ever pirate film disc smuggling
ring. [Reuters]
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Lin's pirate smuggling
business was the "largest one which has been so far uncovered in China," Xinhua
said. The bootleg discs were worth about 188 million yuan ($23.9 million), the
court said, according to Xinhua.
Lin's accomplices received jail sentences of two to 15 years.
The report did not name the foreign country where Lin based his bootlegging.
The Guangxi region borders on Vietnam.
The court verdict came at a time when the United States and European Union
are pressuring China to crack down on pirate copiers of films, music, software
and other kind of intellectual property.
US copyright industry companies claim bootleggers cost them US$2.6 billion in
sales in China last year. But on Chinese streets, pirate DVDs can cost as little
as US$1, much cheaper than legitimate copies sold in wealthy countries.
Washington has left open the door to taking China to the World Trade
Organisation, the Geneva-based world trade watchdog, to demand stricter criminal
prosecution of counterfeiters.
Much of China's smuggled trade in counterfeits is out of the country rather
than into it.
In 2005, United States customs made 8,000 seizures of pirated goods valued at
US$93 million, and this year customs had made more than 14,000 seizures valued
at over $156 million, and China was by far the largest source of the fakes, US
Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez said in Beijing last week.
Brussels said earlier in the month that faked goods cost the European Union
about 500 billion euros (US$644 billion) a year, and two thirds of fakes seized
coming into Europe were from China.