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Yuan hits new record high; stocks fall on jitters in property sector
Trade between China, Japan surpasses US$200b
FDI in China tops 63 bln USD in 2006
Chinese mainland buys 1,200 tons of slow-selling Taiwan oranges
Share prices fall in biggest single-day retreat in 6 months
Yuan pricier than HK dollar for 1st time in 13 years
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Electric appliances chain Gome says founder cleared in probe
PetroChina oil, gas sales soar to record in 2006
Shares rebound 4.7%, fueled by buying of financial, transport stocks
Tibet's fixed-assets investment tops 20 biln yuan
China plans to dam large-scale building projects
Chef says De Niro is hands-off partner in Nobu restaurant chain
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Seven banks keen to set up subsidiaries in rural areas
China considering US$2 billion aid to airlines
State Grid posts 87% surge in net profits in 2006
BMW says China sales up 51 percent amid luxury car boom
Israeli PM encouraged by firm Chinese stance on Iranian nuclear issue
China's 2006 trade surplus hit record US$177.5 billion
 
China's courts see rise in IPR violation cases after WTO entry
WUXI, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- Cases of intellectual property rights (IPR) violations handled by China's courts rose rapidly after China's entry to World Trade Organization (WTO), a meeting of the Supreme People's Court (SPC) heard on Thursday.


"After China's entry to the WTO in 2001, cases of IPR violations increased rapidly and China's judicial protection for IPR also improved," said Cao Jianming, vice president of the SPC.


From 2002 to 2006, China's courts heard 54,321 civil cases of IPR violations, up 145.92 percent, and settled 52,437 cases at first instance trials, up 141.99 percent, over the five years from 1997 to 2001, SPC statistics showed.


During the same period, China's courts had heard 13,170 civil cases of IPR violation at second instance trials, up 8.93 percent, and settled 12,700 cases, up 9.55 percent, SPC statistics showed.


"After entry to the WTO, China strengthened judicial protection for IPR and a preliminary judicial protection system for IPR had already formed," Cao said.


In 2006, China had 172 special courts, 140 collegial panels and 1,667 judges handling IPR violations.


The range of IPR violations had expanded to cover network copyrights, domain names, trademarks, new plant varieties and folk arts, he said.


"These new developments reflect strong demand for judicial protection for IPR," he said.


In 2006 alone, China's courts heard 14,219 civil cases of IPR violation, up 5.92 percent from 2005, and settled 14,056 civil cases in preliminary hearings, up 4.95 percent.


"Last year, judicial system of IPR violation cases has been further improved," he said.

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