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Viewing cable 07VIENTIANE361, SPECIAL 301 LAO PDR 2007: GOL PLEASED WITH DESIGNATION BUT

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07VIENTIANE361 2007-05-03 10:11 2011-08-25 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Vientiane
VZCZCXRO4259
RR RUEHCHI RUEHDT RUEHHM RUEHNH
DE RUEHVN #0361/01 1231011
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 031011Z MAY 07
FM AMEMBASSY VIENTIANE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 1178
INFO RUCNASE/ASEAN MEMBER COLLECTIVE
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 2166
RHHMUNA/CDR USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 VIENTIANE 000361 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
DEPARTMENT FOR EAP/MLS 
DEPARTMENT FOR EB/TPP/IPE 
DEPARTMENT PLEASE PASS TO USTR (BISBEE) 
DEPARTMENT PLEASE PASS TO USAID 
DEPARTMENT PLEASE PASS TO USPTO 
BANGKOK ALSO FOR USAID -- SKIP KISSINGER 
USPACOM FOR POLAD 
 
E.O. 12958:  N/A 
TAGS: ECON ETRD EAID KIPR LA
SUBJECT:  SPECIAL 301 LAO PDR 2007: GOL PLEASED WITH DESIGNATION BUT 
PLEDGES TO STRENGTHEN IPR REGIME 
 
REF: (A) State 56402, (B) Vientiane 143 (C) Vientiane 351 
 
1.  Summary:  Nheune Sisavad, a senior Lao official who oversees 
intellectual property issues, expressed relief to the DCM that Laos 
is not on any Special 301 lists but said that it is important for 
Laos to strengthen its intellectual property rights (IPR) regime. 
He said that the National Assembly has taken "too much time" 
considering the intellectual property law.  The Commerce Minister 
has asked the Deputy Prime Minister to instruct the National 
Assembly to get moving on the law. Mr. Nheune is also working on a 
copyright and trademark decree that would fall under the umbrella 
IPR law along with an existing patent decree.  Mr. Nheune said that 
the government has been cracking down on industrial design 
infringement in the motorcycle industry, which particularly affects 
Honda.  Police have cracked down on pirated CD's in Luang Prabang; 
Vientiane is next.  Mr. Nheune expressed appreciation for 
USG-provided training on IPR issues and said he looked forward to an 
upcoming embassy-hosted training session on IPR issues. 
 
2.  On April 27, the Ambassador informed Khemmani Pholsena, Director 
General in the Foreign Trade Relations Department at the Ministry of 
Industry and Commerce that Laos was not on the 301 list.  At an 
April 30 meeting on another subject (ref C), Committee on Planning 
and Investment President Soulivong told the Ambassador that Laos 
aims to join the WTO in or before 2010 and expressed his own view 
that any attempt to enter before 2010 would be overly ambitious. 
The Ambassador said that U.S. views on Laos' accession will depend 
on how fully Laos implements the U.S.-Lao Bilateral Trade Agreement. 
 End summary. 
 
Meeting with STEA Director General 
---------------------------------- 
 
3.  The DCM met with Nheune Sisavad April 30 to inform him that Laos 
has not been listed on any of the Special 301 lists (ref A).  Mr. 
Nheune is Director General of the Department of Intellectual 
Property, Standardization and Metrology at the Science, Technology, 
and Environment Agency (STEA), a ministerial-level department within 
the Prime Minister's office.  Mr. Nheune was relieved to hear this 
news but said that he recognizes that Laos must intensify its 
efforts to strengthen its intellectual property rights (IPR) regime, 
which, he noted, is a requirement for accession to the World Trade 
Organization (WTO).  He expressed concern that pirating operations 
in China could shift to Laos if authorities crack down there and 
Laos does not strengthen its own protections.  The DCM said that the 
USG shares this concern. 
 
4.  Mr. Nheune said that Laos has taken "too much time" to pass an 
intellectual property law.  The National Assembly has had the 
government's draft intellectual property law since 2005.  The 
National Assembly's economic committee only submits one or two 
economic laws for consideration during each of the two two-week 
sessions the legislature holds each year.  So far, it has not made 
the intellectual property law a priority.  He said that Minister of 
Commerce Nam Viyaket recently wrote a letter to Deputy Prime 
Minister Somsavat Lengsavad asking him to "knock on the door" of the 
National Assembly and ask them to make passage of the law their 
first priority. 
 
5.  Mr. Nheune said that the government's decree on patents, petty 
patents, and industrial designs, issued on January 17, 2002, 
provides protection in these areas but noted that Laos still lacks a 
legal instrument to protect copyrights and trademarks.  The draft 
IPR law will cover all areas of IPR, with decrees, including the 
existing patents decree and future decrees on copyrights and other 
areas covering specific areas in more detail.  He said that STEA 
will submit the copyright decree by the end of this year and will 
forward it to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) 
for approval.  It will include protections for composers, which he 
noted is a requirement of the Berne Convention.  It will also cover 
satellite transmissions.  He said that Laos is considering adhering 
to the Rome Convention for the Protection of Performers, Producers 
of Phonograms and Broadcasting Organizations.  Asked what sources 
STEA has used in drafting the IPR law, he said that he has mostly 
drawn from what he learned in a WIPO course in Geneva and another 
course he attended in France. 
 
6.  Mr. Nheune said that he had gone to Vientiane's Morning Market 
and Evening Market over the weekend to monitor the sale of CD's and 
DVD's.  He warned vendors that selling pirated discs is illegal. 
They seemed to be aware of this already, suggesting that recent 
crackdowns by the police have had an effect.  He said that he was 
 
VIENTIANE 00000361  002 OF 003 
 
 
going to meet with officials from the Vientiane Municipality about 
this issue immediately after his meeting with the DCM.  Officials 
have already taken action in Luang Prabang, a World Heritage Site 
and popular tourist destination, implementing a 200,000 kip fine 
(about $20 U.S.) for pirated CD's and DVD's.  As a result, they have 
disappeared from the markets there.  Addressing the problem in 
Vientiane is the next step. 
 
7.  The government has also been cracking down on pirating of 
industrial designs and trademarks, Mr. Nheune said.  He has 
organized meetings in every district in Vientiane with traders, who 
are mostly Chinese, about widespread pirating of Honda designs by 
Chinese motorcycle manufacturers.  (Note:  Motorcycles are the main 
form of transportation in Vientiane, and Hondas are considered much 
more desirable than inexpensive Chinese motorcycles.  End note.) 
Mr. Nheune has warned the traders that if they do not stop these 
activities, they will face criminal sanctions, including a possible 
three-year jail term.  This campaign appears to have been 
successful. 
 
8.  Mr. Nheune said that the local Korean light vehicle manufacturer 
Kolao has also used Honda designs illegally.  The Vientiane 
municipality seized 30 motorcycles, which remain in its custody. 
Mr. Nheune said that there have been 30 trademark and industrial 
design cases settled through administrative procedures as well as 
one court case.  A less serious problem related to motorcycles is 
that young people are buying stickers produced in Thailand with the 
brand names of prestigious motorcycle manufacturers, which they use 
to cover up the real brand name.  The solution for this is public 
education, he said.  He is organizing TV programming on this issue. 
 
 
9.  Mr. Nheune expressed appreciation for USG assistance on 
intellectual property issues.  He said that USPTO Senior Counsel 
Peter Fowler has been particularly helpful.  A seminar by Professor 
Justin Hughes, director of the intellectual property law program, 
was also very useful.  He said that over 70 participants from the 
public and private sectors would attend an EU workshop the week of 
May 7 as part of EU-ASEAN cooperation on IPR.  The DCM told Mr. 
Nheune that the Embassy was planning to bring the Regional 
Intellectual Property Attach at the U.S. Patent and Trademark 
Office at Embassy Bangkok to Vientiane in late May to conduct 
training for Lao officials on intellectual property issues.  Mr. 
Nheune welcomed this opportunity. 
 
Discussions with Commerce and CPI Officials 
------------------------------------------- 
 
10.  On April 27, the Ambassador saw Khemmani Pholsena, Director 
General in the Foreign Trade Relations Department at the Ministry of 
Industry and Commerce, at a reception and told her that Laos was not 
on the 301 list.  Ms. Khemmani asked the Ambassador about how Laos 
would be viewed in terms of WTO accession -- would it be treated 
similarly to Vietnam or would it receive more concessional 
treatment?  The Ambassador said that it was her understanding that 
Laos would receive the most lenient possible treatment. 
 
11.  CPI President Soulivong Daravong told the Ambassador during an 
April 30 meeting that Laos planned to apply to enter the WTO in or 
before 2010, commenting that any attempt to enter before 2010 would 
be overly ambitious.  The Ambassador noted that the GOL's 
performance in carrying out elements of the Bilateral Trade 
Agreement (which came into effect in 2005) would be a significant 
factor with regard to how the U.S. would view the GOL's WTO 
application.  Soulivong accepted that Laos has a problem with 
illegal CDs being sold in the marketplace, although these are not 
produced in Laos.   However, responding to the Ambassador's concern 
that Laos might be a haven for illegal producers in the future, 
Soulivong said that it would be hard for illegal producers to 
relocate to Laos if other countries in the region were to step up 
anti-IPR enforcement, because these neighbors have a greater ability 
to protect their borders.  The current GOL problem is the inability 
to protect Lao borders from the influx of illegal products.  Still, 
Soulivong said the GOL is doing its best.  The Ambassador offered to 
help provide technical assistance especially with monitoring Laos' 
long borders. 
 
Comment 
------- 
 
12.  As we have noted before (ref B), STEA has a talented staff with 
a genuine commitment to strengthening Laos's IPR regime.  CPI and 
 
VIENTIANE 00000361  003 OF 003 
 
 
Commerce share this commitment.  As in many other areas in Laos, the 
biggest problem is on the enforcement side.  It was encouraging to 
hear from Mr. Nheune that law enforcement officials have taken some 
steps to crack down on IPR violations.  With WTO accession at stake, 
the government may have sent word to the police that it is time to 
start cracking down. 
 
HASLACH