COSON Chairman, Chief Tony Okoroji signs the music copyright royalty
agreement between COSON and the Nigerian broadcast industry as Mr. Kenny Ogungbe
and Alhaji Abubakar Jijiwa look on.
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Visibly elated Chairman, Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON), Chief Tony
Okoroji, has described as ‘huge’ the recent agreement between COSON and the
broadcasting industry in Nigeria represented by Broadcasting Organizations of
Nigeria (BON) and Independent Broadcasters Association of Nigeria (IBAN), respectively.
Chief Okoroji was addressing some members of COSON who had stormed
COSON Headquarters in Ikeja to congratulate him and celebrate the agreement,
days after the high profile event at Eko Hotel & Suites, where the documents
were signed. The intellectual property activist whose work across Africa is
widely acknowledged and whose leadership and doggedness won the battle for the
COSON-BON/IBAN pact told SHOWBIZPLUSng, “the many people who have described the agreement as ‘historic’
are correct.
It is a watershed moment. By the agreement, the entire
broadcasting industry across Nigeria undertakes to start immediately to pay for
the music which they had for many years used for free. They will also make
some payments for the works which they had previously used. Beyond the money,
this instantly uplifts the status of creative people in Nigeria and changes the
nature of our relationship with users of our works. The whole concept of
intellectual property is no longer just a theory in Nigeria. It has finally
come to life. This will have a massive impact on our economy down the road”.
Asked how he feels about the members of COSON who stabbed the
struggle in the back, the former president of PMAN said, “The victory is not
mine. It belongs to all Nigerians and every single person in Nigeria’s creative
enterprise including those who may not have shared our vision because they did
not understand. At this point, we cannot be small minded. We must be forgiving.
The victory also belongs to the broadcasting stations which can now do their
programming without fear of law suits. There is no question that I feel
fulfilled that our labour has not been in vain and that I have not misled
practitioners in the Nigerian music industry. Of course, to get the agreement
was tough, very tough and so much sacrifice had to be made along the way. It is
not easy to forget the period in 2013 when my name was read out several times
every day on radio and television stations across Nigeria with so much scorn
you would think that I was a criminal. All is well that ends well and I hold no
grudge against anyone”
Chief Okoroji said that it would have been impossible to get the
agreement if Nigeria had a system of multiple collective management organizations.
According to Okoroji, “people who are not familiar with collective management
of copyright wonder why a liberal democrat like me would clamour for a sole
collective management system for music in Nigeria. In the struggle to get this
agreement, everyone could see the significant effort to break COSON and to
deploy divide and rule tactics. That would have been a lot easier to accomplish
if we had another approved CMO in the music industry. That is why around the
world even in liberal democracies, the sole CMO system is the vogue”
Chief Okoroji was full of praise for the NBC DG, Mr. Emeka Mba. In
his words, “the agreement probably would not have happened but for the immense
effort made by Mr. Emeka Mba, Director-General, National Broadcasting
Commission (NBC) and his staff who worked tirelessly to bring the parties
together and to trigger the negotiations. I also need to recognize the
contributions of Mr. Afam Ezekude, the Director-General, Nigerian Copyright
Commission (NCC) and his staff. Without their untiring efforts and close
engagement in this process, it may never have been done.
“There were several moments during the negotiations when it very
much appeared that we had reached a deadlock and that the negotiations would
break down. At those moments, it took the special experience and skill of Mr.
Mac Emakpore who chaired the negotiations to get us to swallow that which we
would otherwise not even have chewed. We are therefore forever indebted to Mr.
Emakpore”.
It will be recalled that in 2013, COSON instituted several
multi-million naira law suits against some of Nigeria’s biggest broadcast
stations including AIT, Ray Power, STV, Rhythm FM, Beat FM, Classic FM, Naija
FM, Smooth FM, Brila FM, etc., with a threat to sue many more broadcast
stations. In response, Broadcasting Organizations of Nigeria (BON) and
Independent Broadcasting Association of Nigeria (IBAN) announced the suspension
of the broadcast of the music of nearly all the topmost musicians in Nigeria,
all of them members of COSON on radio and TV stations across Nigeria. This
resulted in massive public outrage across the country including the
intervention of the House of Representatives.
The rapidly unfolding events were followed by an all-out media war
between the music and broadcast industries. It took a major public
pronouncement made by the NBC at the beginning of 2014, which pronouncement set
up the COSON/BON/IBAN/NBC/NCC Joint Committee for tempers to cool and the
negotiations that led to the agreement to commence.
2 comments:
Finally!
at last! thank God this is over
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