Hi friends, hope you all are doing well. Here is a report that came in
The Hindu on the Marrakesh treaty.

Breakthrough for the blind
Jul 17, 2014 01:50 AM
| 12 comments

India under the Narendra Modi government has become the first country
in the world to ratify the Marrakesh Convention that codifies
exemptions to copyrights
 to benefit blind and vision-impaired readers. The government should
now build on this momentum and enact the comprehensive and
path-breaking law, now before
a Parliamentary Standing Committee, that could transform the lives of
millions of people with various disabilities. This is imperative also
because seven
long years have elapsed since New Delhi ratified (it was one of the
earliest to do so) the United Nations Convention for the Disabled. The
current treaty
of the World Intellectual Property Organization removes legal
restrictions on the conversion of published works into any one among a
range of alternative
formats which the blind and vision-impaired may access. Ratifying
countries are required to enact domestic laws to overcome their own
copyright limitations
to further this objective. The treaty also eases hurdles for
cross-country exchange of books in different formats so as to overcome
the cost of duplication.
This is a genuine concern, as non-governmental organisations are by
and large the principal service-providers for the disabled. India
amended its copyright
law in 2012 broadly
on the lines of the Marrakesh Treaty.
Hence, the most direct benefit from its ratification of the latter
would be the access to literature that is converted overseas. WIPO has
just launched
the Accessible Books Consortium to provide technical support for the
production of suitable formats and to create a global database of such
transcriptions
and to encourage publishers to participate in this initiative.

All of the above potentially add up to vast improvements on the
present situation where published works are out of the reach of an
overwhelming majority
of the blind. The exception to this rule is the extremely limited
availability of educational material. The worst-affected are people in
developing countries,
which are home to 90 per cent of the world’s blind population,
according to the World Health Organization. Moreover, barely 15
countries world-wide have
copyright exemptions as per a WIPO finding, and these are mostly in
the advanced economies. The full potential of this convention will be
realised ultimately
when large numbers of
blind people
 have full access to quality education, which is still a distant
dream. The treaty will not enter into force internationally unless it
is ratified by at
least 20 countries. The lack of backing from the United States from
the beginning of the negotiations could prove to be a handicap in
canvassing wider
support. The world has indeed come a long way since WIPO began to
contemplate copyright exemptions some three decades ago.

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Regards
Joel Vergis



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