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Thursday 27 October 2011

SAVE INTERVENTION FUND, OKOROJI TELLS JONATHAN

President Goodluck Jonathan
COSON Chairman, Chief Tony Okoroji
Chairman, Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON), Chief Tony Okoroji has made a 0passionate plea to President Goodluck Jonathan to take urgent steps to save the Entertainment Industry Intervention Fund which the President announced last year with so much fanfare. Chief Okoroji who presented the Lead Paper at the Colloquium of the National Festival of Arts & Culture (NAFEST) on Wednesday, October 26 at the Cultural Centre Complex in Calabar held the packed audience, made up of senators, commissioners, permanent secretaries and culture administrators from all the states of the federation, spell bound for close to 45 minutes.

Participants at NAFEST
Leading three other discussants from different Nigerian universities to x ray the theme of the colloquium, Nigerian Traditional Music: A Vehicle for Economic Transformation and Unity, Chief Okoroji, a former President of PMAN said, “Some of us participated in the discussions that led to the institution of the intervention fund, but suddenly, the falcon can no longer hear the falconer. I have been invited to a few meetings from which I have come out with the belief that those charged with administering the fund are not quite sure what they are supposed to do.
“I have very good reason to fear that eventually those who will access the fund are not those for which the fund was established and those who truly need the fund will never smell it. In the industry, there is growing disappointment and peculating conclusion that the intervention fund which created so much initial buzz is after all an election gimmick and money for the boys. No one else has the muscle to change that growing feeling than President Jonathan himself. He needs to personally and quickly intervene in the intervention fund before it becomes an albatross. He needs to give the marching orders to his team to take charge and ensure that the solemn promise he made to the entertainment community is kept”
In his paper, Chief Tony Okoroji, author of the book, Copyright & the New Millionaires and one of the nation’s foremost experts on intellectual property dwelt extensively on issues of intellectual property rights and collective management of rights in the digital age. He praised individual Nigerian musicians and producers for their hard work and enterprise which he says has now made Nigeria a significant force in world contemporary music. He argued however that to sustain this position and harness it to provide jobs for the teaming masses of the unemployed in Nigeria and contribute to national development, the nation needs to urgently articulate the way forward and provide the necessary institutional support that will drive private sector projects.   
Chief Okoroji disagreed with those who have derisively described what is now termed Naija hip pop as a poor imitation of the American hip-pop culture. He traced the development of the burgeoning popular music culture in Nigeria citing examples to conclude that the present day Nigerian popular music forms do not originate from America but have their roots in traditional Nigerian music. According to him, it is indeed American hip-pop culture which is traceable through Soul music, Blues and Jazz music to the Negro Spirituals taken from West Africa to America by the slaves uprooted from our shores. He declared that no one should be surprised by any similarity in the forms as they share the same ancestry and genes.  
Observing that there is serious disconnect between the Federal Ministry of Culture and the private sector practitioners the ministry was set up to support, Chief Okoroji called on the Minister of Culture to reposition the ministry and make it more relevant to the needs of the nation. He decried the abject lack of resources to actualize important projects in the cultural sector saying that things may have been different if the National Endowment for the Arts was up and running.
In the words of Chief Okoroji: “I believe that everyone in the cultural sector in Nigeria ought to be thoroughly embarrassed that more than 20 years after the promulgation of the National Endowment Fund for the Arts Decree (Decree No. 52 of 1991: now the National Endowment Fund for the Arts Act) the fund remains a mirage and people in the cultural sector still grope around for funding when an important source of funds is there. The Honourable Minister of Culture needs to act now. To my mind, if his only achievement in office is to get the National Endowment Fund for the Arts up and running well, he would have left his footprints in the sands of time”
Among those present at the Colloquium were Senator Hassan Barata, Chairman, Senate Committee on Culture and Tourism, Senator Ahmed Sani Stores, Deputy Chairman, Senate Committee on Culture and Tourism, His Royal Highness, Etubom Bob Duke representing the Obong of Calabar and Mr. Gabe Onah, Special Adviser on Tourism to the Governor of Cross River State. The Colloquium proceedings were chaired by Chief Segun Olusola.

Wednesday 19 October 2011

NAFEST 2011: OKOROJI TO PRESENT LEAD PAPER



COSON Chairman, Chief Tony Okoroji
Chairman, Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON) Chief Tony Okoroji will present the Lead Paper at the Colloquium of the National Festival of Arts & Culture (NAFEST) which holds on Wednesday, October 26 at the Cultural Centre Complex in Calabar. Chief Okoroji will be leading three other discussants from different Nigerian universities to x ray the theme of the colloquium in the Canaan City which is Nigerian Traditional Music: A Vehicle for Economic Transformation and Unity.
The lead paper from Chief Okoroji, a celebrated past president of PMAN is expected to look at the economic enhancement capacity of traditional music, the limitations faced by practitioners in a global market, ownership of traditional music forms and challenges of royalty payment, music as a vehicle for national unity, retrieval/documentation of disappearing forms of traditional music, etc.
Chief Tony Okoroji, author of the book, Copyright & the New Millionaires and one of the nation’s foremost experts on intellectual property is expected to dwell extensively on issues of intellectual property rights and collective management of rights in the digital age.
Senator Hassan Barata, Chairman, Senate Committee on Culture and Tourism will be Special Guest of Honour while Hon. Ben Nwankwo, House Committee Chairman on Culture and Tourism is the Guest of Honour at the Colloquium proceedings which will be chaired by Chief Segun Olusola.
All 36 States of the Federation and the FCT are expected to participate in this year’s National Festival of Arts and Culture. The festival is also expected to attract stakeholders from the academia, non-governmental organizations as well as individual promoters of Nigerian arts and culture.
The Festival Colloquium is the intellectual platform of the National Festival for Arts and Culture, the festival that unites the nation. It is the forum for discourse, analysis and suggested best practices on the presentation and promotion of Nigerian cultural industries and products.

Tuesday 18 October 2011

OKOROJI BACK FROM ACCRA FORGES COOPERATION BETWEEN THE MUSIC INDUSTRIES OF GHANA AND NIGERIA

Chief Tony Okoroji, Chairman, Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON), the nations sole government approved copyright collective management organization for musical works and sound recordings, arrived the country this past weekend after a three day visit to Ghana which he has described as a ‘mission of peace and co-operation’
While in Ghana, Chief Okoroji met with visiting officials of the Norwegian Copyright Development Association (NORCODE). NORCODE which is doing significant copyright development work in several nations around the globe is one of the major international organizations supporting COSON with training and capacity building. At the Accra meeting were the Managing Director of NORCODE, Mr Frode Lovik and the collective management expert and NORCODE advisor, Mr. Saemund Fiskvik.
In Accra, Chief Okoroji also addressed a large meeting of the Association of Music Right Owners (AMRO) where he spoke of the historic relationship between the Nigerian music industry and the Ghanaian industry and the need for stronger cooperation between the two industries for increased income to practitioners in both countries.
The COSON Chairman also held a joint meeting with Ms. Yaa Attafua, Ghana’s Acting Copyright Administrator, Mr. Bice Osei Kuffour, President, Musicians Union of Ghana (MUSIGA) and Mr. Carlos Sakyi, Interim Chairman of Ghana Music Rights Organization (GAMRO), the new all embracing national music CMO set up similar to COSON.
Chief Okoroji, one of Africa’s most respected experts on copyright, has described the Accra meetings as very productive. According to the former President of PMAN, “I was very well received in Ghana. Our two nations will benefit immensely from the cooperation we are forging.  With the high level of use of Nigerian music in Ghana, we have a major stake in the development of the copyright system in our sister nation. Our Ghanaian brothers and sisters with whom we share common ancestry are excited by the opportunity to work closely with us on different fronts and together we will significantly expand the frontiers of the protection of the rights of musicians in our sub region”