American Companies Issue Conditions to Back Proposed US-Kenya Trade Deal

American Companies Issue Conditions to Back Proposed US-Kenya Trade Deal

American companies operating under the International Intellectual Property Alliance (IIPA) are ready to back the proposed free trade agreement (FTA) between Kenya and the US but on certain conditions.

The alliance, in a letter to Trump’s administration, said Kenya must first enact strong intellectual property laws for it to support the trade deal being negotiated among the two countries.

The companies comprising film, software and book distributors want Kenya to fix its weak copyright laws and guarantee the protection of their patents and trademarks before the FTA is inked.

“The protection of the copyrights will essentially put money into the pockets of authors, producers, and all creators,” IIPA says in their letter.

“Yet Kenya’s copyright legal and enforcement frameworks remain deficient, and piracy, particularly online, remains a significant barrier for the creative industries in Kenya.”

Although Kenya amended its Copyright Act last year to provide rights holders with some more protections, IIPA has raised questions over whether the protections meet the required international standards and best practices. 

“These negotiations should be a catalyst for the Government of Kenya to take the necessary steps to modernize Kenya’s copyright legal and enforcement regimes, and improve its marketplace for legitimate digital trade in copyright-protected materials,” the lobby adds.

IIPA, a US private sector coalition, was formed in 1984 and represents over 3,200 US companies that produce and distribute copyrightable content.

“IIPA is hopeful that the US-Kenya negotiations will both build on the positive achievements of the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), and depart from certain provisions that are problematic. If this is accomplished, the Agreement can set the bar for a high-level agreement that is truly built for the digital age, including much-needed copyright protections and enforcement provisions.”

In March, the US government invited American and Kenyan companies to submit their views on the proposed trade agreement.

Kenyan companies under their lobby, Kenya Private Sector Alliance (Kepsa), have backed the trade pact, saying it would open more export and import opportunities for them and their US counterparts.

Kepsa dismissed fears that such an agreement would open the floodgates for cheaply-produced US goods, thus killing their businesses and urged Kenyan officials to expedite negotiations with the US.

Comments

Sukuma (not verified)     Mon, 05/04/2020 @ 11:23pm

We do not need these American companies in Kenya. These are the same colonial era conditioned imposed on African countries in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. It is another way of stealing our resources. Say No!

Anonymous UI (not verified)     Tue, 05/05/2020 @ 08:59am

Kenyans, no more old clothes that may come from those who died of Covid-19. Alot of people have died in Western countries of Covid-19. Their old clothes will be dumped in "Shit-hole" and "Monkey" countries. It's time to say NO. Use your old clothes and make cheap clothes yourselves. Research herbs just like Madagascar.
If there is anything we have learned in quarantine is self- sufficiency for the black man around the world!!
60 years of dependency is enough.
Let the black man wake up to a new world!! Even our God has said No to dependency!!

Guest #13 (not verified)     Tue, 05/05/2020 @ 10:39am

This trade deal should be rejected until a critical analysis of its effects on various nascent industries is reported to the kenyan public. We should not just look at it's effect today we need to look at where we expect to be 5,10,25 years from now. In soccer is common knowledge you don't play the ball where your team mate is at the moment. You play it where you expect them to be the next play.

Hustler (not verified)     Tue, 05/05/2020 @ 01:41pm

America provides the government of Kenya a lot by way of foreign remittances which is Kenya's number one foreign exchange earners. We just have to avoid being consumers but also producers for products consumed in America. Otherwise, we need fair trading policies without corruption or bribery.

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