Shem, Very good question. As you know, not only is our country very small and poor, it does not have a history of the small man winning battles against the big guys in the courts (unless its assult with a hundred witnesses or some such thing)) that is why Lunghabo said it would be a test case. We just don't have the Intellectual Property laws in place.
I do not think it will be a test case, I think it will be a case that will be handled like all the rest. I would be very suprised if anything apart from a judgement in favour of the big boys is given. As I said earlier its a waste of time and money in my opinion. If you are foolhardy enough to sue the big boys then do it correctly. Do it where the laws are fair and the chances are much higher of victory. An example of South Africans suing the British Parent company of a South African subsidiary that erred is contained below. The precedent is thus set. http://www.fasken.com/WEB/FMDWEBSITEFRENCH.NSF/0/9B7DA3616057265085256C4D004C40EA/$File/PARENT%20CORPORATION%20LIABILITY%20FOR%20FOREIGN%20SUBSIDIARIES.PDF?OpenElement The end of the document says.......... H. THE ENGLISH CAPE ASBESTOS DECISION The English House of Lords recently ruled on whether South African residents could sue in English Courts for tort damages arising in the South African asbestos mines owned by a subsidiary of an English parent corporation9. More than three thousand South Africans sought standing to sue London-based Cape PLC for negligent control of its South African subsidiaries. Cape PLC owned the South African holding company, Cape Asbestos South Africa (Pty.) Limited ( CASAP ), which in turn owned the asbestos mines in South Africa s Northern Cape Province. The claim involves asbestosis and cancers attributable to exposure to asbestos in the CASAP mines before 1979. Cape PLC ended its operations in South Africa in 1979. The House of Lords unanimously decided that all the claimants could sue the parent company in England. The House of Lords found that this case concerns the responsibility of the parent company for ensuring the observance of proper standards of health and safety by its overseas subsidiaries.............. Kiggs On Tue, 2004-09-21 at 14:35, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Good people , > > Do u know that the suit this guy(lets call him .....!) last wore was > one he had "bought" and returned to the store the day after he wore it > ? Using the "u can return it in 7 days if you are not happy sales > sweetener?" > This is an example of many sales techniques. > > enlighten me , what is the present status of the law governing > > a) intellectual copy rights ? > b) ICT stuff - software and hardware, are these now acceptable as > evidence ? > c) e-commerce, has Uganda signed up to the unictral e-commerce law or > has it been enacted/incorporated into our laws ? > > warmest regards > > > > Shem Nnaggenda Kanabi-Nsubuga > AFRICA REGIONAL OFFICE > Standard Chartered Bank, 1, Aldermanbury Square, London EC2V 7SB, UK > Tel: +44 (0)20 72807805 : +44 (0)20 7457 7805 or +44 (0)20 7280 7500 > > AEN: + 1044 7805 FONENET+1401 7805 Fax: +44 207 280 7208; Mobile: +44 > (0) 790 4795061 > > > "Leading the Way in Asia , Africa and the Middle East" > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ > --------------------------------------------------------- > > This email is confidential. If you are not the addressee tell the sender immediately > and destroy this email without using, sending or storing it. Emails are not secure > and may suffer errors, viruses, delay, interception and amendment. Standard > Chartered PLC and subsidiaries ("SCGroup") do not accept liability for damage caused > by this email and may monitor email traffic. Unless expressly stated, any opinions > are the sender's and are not approved by SCGroup and this email is not an offer, > solicitation, recommendation or agreement of any kind. > > > > Standard Chartered Bank ("SCB") is a member of SCGroup incorporated in England with > limited liability. SCB's principal office is 1 Aldermanbury Square, London, EC2V > 7SB, UK. SCB is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority ("FSA") > and in FSA's register under no. 114276. SCB's VAT no. is GB244106593. FSA is the > lead regulator for the SCGroup. For regulators in other countries contact the local > compliance officer. > > > --------------------------------------------------------- > > ______________________________________________________________________ > _______________________________________________ > LUG mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/lug > %LUG is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/ _______________________________________________ LUG mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/lug %LUG is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/
