Okereke |
Interestingly, the society headed by Chief Tony Okoroji, has equally announced that the necessary machinery has been put in place to ensure that it becomes impossible to deploy music in any business in Nigeria without the appropriate license.
This was made known by the Chief Licensing Officer of
COSON, Mr. Chibueze Okereke in a press statement signed and sent to SHOWBIZPLUSng.
Mr. Okereke said that it has become crucial to bring
down the full weight of the law on recalcitrant music users who have failed to
pay for the music they deploy in their businesses.
Said Mr. Okereke, “COSON has for a long time essentially
used moral suasion in dealing with defaulting organizations but we are now left
with no option than to bring down the full weight of the law on those who have
refused to listen. We have given this category of music users a long rope to
act responsibly but have constantly been disappointed with their show of
disregard for the intellectual property rights of the teeming young Nigerians
COSON represents. It has therefore become imperative to save COSON members and
our creative industry from plunging into irrelevance by addressing what has
become the proverbial cog in the wheel of progress.
‘To this end, we have met with our team of lawyers and
we have asked them to leave no stone unturned and teach any organization
deploying unlicensed music in Nigeria an unforgettable lesson. At the end of
the day, each of them will understand that it is far more expensive to ignore
COSON than to obtain a music copyright licence from COSON. Anyone who has dealt
with COSON, will tell you that we do not say things that we will not do. If we
can engage the entire hotel industry in Nigeria and get an agreement; engage
the entire broadcasting industry in Nigeria and get an agreement; bring a major
court action against a state government and take Nigeria’s largest bank to
court, that should tell one and all that we mean business.
‘Let it also be clear that when we talk about the
licensing of music, we are talking about the licensing of both Nigerian music
as COSON has reciprocal agreements giving it the powers to license the music of
more than one hundred countries in Nigeria’.
In the words of Mr. Okereke, ‘while COSON is not out to
stop the commercial and public use of music by businesses, we will not hesitate
to fish out those music users who think they can exploit the works of COSON
members and affiliates without adhering to the demands of the law. We are not
joking. This is war without end’.
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