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Law No. 2005-30 of April 5, 2006 on Copyright and Related Rights

 Law No. 2005-30 of April 5, 2006 relating to Copyright and Related Rights of Republic of Benin

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LAW NO. 2005­30 OF APRIL 5, 2006, ON PROTECTION OF

COPYRIGHT AND NEIGHBORING RIGHTS IN THE REPUBLIC OF BENIN

Source: Beninese Copyright Office (BUBEDRA)

Courtesy translation provided by WIPO, © 2012

The National Assembly deliberated on and adopted, at its session of August 9, 2005, and

subsequently at its session of January 12, 2006, in accordance with Constitutional Court

Decision DCC 05-143 of November 29, 2005, on conformity with the Constitution,

In accordance with Constitutional Court Decision DCC 06-06-038 of April 4, 2006, on

conformity with the Constitution,

The President of the Republic hereby promulgates the following Law:

TITLE I

DEFINITIONS

ARTICLE 1 The following terms as used in this Law shall be defined as follows:

• "performers" means actors, singers, musicians, dancers and other persons who act,

sing, recite, declaim, play in or in any way perform literary or artistic works or

expressions of folklore;

• "author" means the natural person who created the work; any reference in this Law to

the economic rights of authors, where the original holder of those rights is a natural or

legal person other than the author, means the rights of this other original rightsholder;

• "communication to the public" means the transmission by wire or wireless means of

the images, the sounds, or the images and sounds, of a work, a performance or a

phonogram in such a way that they may be perceived by persons outside the family circle

or the immediate circle of friends in one or more places sufficiently distant from the place

of origin of the transmission that, without such transmission, the images or the sounds

cannot be perceived in such place, irrespective of whether those persons may perceive the

images or the sounds in the same place and at the same time, or in different places and at

different times individually chosen by them;

• "copy" means the outcome of any act of reproduction;

• "phonogram" means any exclusively aural fixation of the sounds of a performance or

other sounds or a representation of sounds, other than in the form of a fixation

incorporated in an audiovisual work;

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• "copy of a phonogram" means any medium containing sounds reproduced directly

from a phonogram and which incorporates all or a substantial part of the sounds fixed in

such phonogram;

• "expressions of folklore" means the production of characteristic elements of the

traditional artistic heritage developed and perpetuated on the territory of the Republic of

Benin by a community or by individuals recognized as meeting the traditional artistic

expectations of such community, and includes:

- folk tales, folk poetry and mysteries;

- folk songs and instrumental music;

- folk dancing and entertainments;

- products of folk art, such as drawings, paintings, sculptures, pottery, terracotta,

carvings, mosaics, woodwork, metal objects, jewelry, textiles and costumes;

• "fixation" means the incorporation of sounds and/or images or the representation or

performance thereof in a medium that allows them to be perceived, reproduced or

communicated through a device;

• "rental" means the transfer of possession of the original or of a copy of a work or of a

phonogram for a limited period of time, for profit-making purposes;

• "work" means any original intellectual creation of a literary or artistic nature within the

meaning of Article 8 of the present Law;

• "original work" means a work that, by its characteristics and by its form alone, allows

its author to be identified;

• "audiovisual work" means a work consisting of a series of related images giving an

impression of movement, accompanied by sounds and capable of being heard;

• "collective work" means a work created by a number of authors at the initiative and

under the authority of a natural or legal person who or which publishes the work in his

name and in which the contributions of the authors who participated in its creation merge

in the whole work so that it is impossible to identify the various contributions and their

authors;

• "composite work" means a new work in which a pre-existing work is incorporated

without the collaboration of the author thereof;

• "work of applied art" means an artistic creation having a utilitarian function or

embodied in a utilitarian article, whether a work of handicraft or a work produced by

industrial processes;

• "work of joint authorship" means a work that is the product of collaboration between

two or more authors, irrespective of whether the work constitutes an indivisible whole or

consists of autonomously created parts;

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• "photographic work" means the recording of light or other radiation on any medium on which an image is produced or from which an image may be produced, whatever the

nature of the technology (chemical, electronic or other) through which the recording is

made. An extract from a work means a part taken from the work, whether or not the

source is mentioned. An extract shall not be deemed a work, whatever the mode of

extraction used;

• "posthumous work" means a work made accessible to the public after the death of the

author;

• "producer of an audiovisual work" means the natural or legal person who or which

takes the initiative and the responsibility of creating such work;

• "phonogram producer" means the natural or legal person who or which takes the

initiative and assumes the responsibility for the first fixation of the sounds of a

performance or other sounds, or representations of sounds;

• "computer program" means a set of instructions expressed in words, codes, schemes or

any other form capable, once incorporated in a machine-readable medium, of having a

task carried out or a particular result achieved by a computer or by an electronic process

capable of processing information;

• "published" refers to a work or a phonogram, copies of which have been made

accessible to the public, with the consent of the author in the case of a work, or with the

consent of the producer in the case of a phonogram, for sale, rental or public lending or

for any other transfer of ownership, in sufficient numbers to meet the normal needs of the

public;

• "broadcasting" means the communication of a work, a performance or a phonogram to the public by wireless transmission, including transmission by satellite;

• "public performance" means the fact of reciting, playing, dancing or otherwise

performing a work, either directly or through any device or process or, in the case of an

audiovisual work, of showing the images thereof in sequence or of making the

accompanying sounds audible in one or more places where persons outside the family

circle or the immediate circle of friends are or may be present, irrespective of whether

they are or may be present in the same place and at the same time or in different places

and at different times, where the performance may be perceived without there necessarily

being communication to the public within the meaning of the present Article;

• "to perform" a work means to recite it, play it, dance it or perform it, either directly or

by any device or process or, in the case of an audiovisual work, to show the images

thereof in any sequence whatsoever or to make the sounds accompanying it audible;

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• "reproduction" means the making of one or more copies of a work or phonogram or of

a part of a work or phonogram in any form whatsoever, including aural and visual

recordings, and the permanent or temporary storage of a work or phonogram in electronic

form;

• "reprographic reproduction" of a work means the making of facsimile copies of

originals or copies of a work by means other than painting, for instance by photocopying.

The making of facsimile copies that are reduced or enlarged shall also be deemed

"reprographic reproduction";

• "rebroadcasting" means the simultaneous broadcasting by one broadcasting

organization of a broadcast of another broadcasting organization.

TITLE II

SUBJECT MATTER AND SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT; AUTHORS AND

PROTECTEDWORKS

CHAPTER I

SUBJECT MATTER OF COPYRIGHT

ARTICLE 2 The author of any original literary or artistic work of the mind shall enjoy,

by the mere fact of its creation, an exclusive incorporeal property right in the work which

shall be enforceable against all persons.

ARTICLE 3 The existence or conclusion of a contract for hire or service by the author of

a work of the mind shall not entail any derogation from the enjoyment of copyright

afforded by Article 2 of the present Law.

CHAPTER II

SCOPE OF COPYRIGHT

ARTICLE 4 Copyright shall include attributes of a moral nature as well as attributes of

an economic nature.

1. Independently of his economic rights and even after assignment of such rights, the

author of a work shall have the right to:

- claim authorship of his work, in particular the right to have his name affixed to

copies of his work and, wherever possible and in the usual manner, in relation to

any public use of his work;

- remain anonymous or use a pseudonym;

- oppose any distortion, mutilation or other modification of his work or any other

action derogatory to it where such action might be prejudicial to his honor or

reputation;

- decide whether or not to disclose his work.

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The rights afforded to the author under the preceding paragraph shall be perpetual,

inalienable and imprescriptible.

Notwithstanding assignment of his economic rights, an author shall enjoy a right of

withdrawal, even after publication of his work, with respect to the assignee. However, he

may exercise such right only on condition that he indemnify the assignee in advance for

any prejudice which the withdrawal may cause him.

Where the author decides to have his work published after having exercised his right of

withdrawal, he shall be required to offer his rights of exploitation in the first instance to

the assignee whom he originally chose.

The right to disclose posthumous works shall be exercised, during their lifetimes, by the

executor or executors appointed by the author. If there are none, or after their death, and

unless the author has willed otherwise, this right shall be exercised in the following order:

by the descendants; by a spouse in respect of whom there is no final judgment of

separation or who has not remarried; by heirs other than descendants who inherit all or

part of the estate; and by the universal legatees or donees of the totality of the future

assets.

This right may be exercised even after the exclusive right of exploitation pursuant to title

VIII of this Law has expired.

In the event of manifest abuse in the exercise or non-exercise of the right of disclosure by

the representatives of the deceased author referred to above, the civil court may order any

appropriate measure. The same shall apply where there is a dispute between said

representatives, where there are no known successors in title or in the event of abeyance

or escheat.

2. An author shall enjoy the exclusive right to exploit his work in any form

whatsoever and to derive monetary profit therefrom.

He shall enjoy, in particular, the exclusive right to perform or authorize the performance

of any of the following acts:

- the reproduction of his work;

- the translation of his work;

- the preparation of adaptations, arrangements or other transformations of his

work;

- the rental or authorization of the rental or any other transfer of possession of the

original or copies of his work, irrespective of the ownership of the original or

copy being rented;

- the distribution or authorization of the distribution of the original or copies of

his work to the public by means of sale or any other transfer of ownership;

- the performance of his work in public;

- the import of copies of his work;

- the broadcast of his work;

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- the communication of his work to the public by cable or by any other means.

The rental right shall not apply to the rental of computer programs in those cases where

the program itself is not the essential subject of the rental.

Authors of graphic or three-dimensional works shall, notwithstanding any assignment of

the original work, have an inalienable right to a share in the profit from any sale of such

work by public auction or through a dealer.

After the death of the author, this resale royalty right shall subsist for the benefit of his

heirs.

The royalty shall consist of a percentage of the proceeds from the sale collected for the

author or his heirs.

The percentage referred to in the preceding paragraph shall be laid down in regulations.

Under the present Article, "the work" means the work both in its original form and in a

form derived from the original.

CHAPTER III

AUTHORS AND PROTECTEDWORKS

SECTION 1 AUTHORS OF WORKS

ARTICLE 5 The author of a work shall be the natural person who created it.

A work shall be deemed created, irrespective of any public disclosure, by virtue of the

mere fact of its conception or realization, even if incomplete, by the author.

Authorship shall belong, unless proved otherwise, to the person or persons under whose

name(s) the work is disclosed.

Where a work is created by an author on behalf of a natural or legal person, hereinafter

referred to as "employer", under a work contract for the author's employment, unless

otherwise provided in the contract, the original holder of the moral and economic rights

shall be the author, but the economic rights in the work shall be deemed to have been

transferred to the employer to the extent justified by the habitual activities of the

employer at the time of creation of the work.

The joint authors of a work of joint authorship shall be the joint holders of the moral and

economic rights in that work. However, if a work of joint authorship may be divided into

independent parts, that is to say if the parts of such work may be reproduced, performed

or otherwise used separately, the joint authors may enjoy independent rights in those

parts, while remaining joint holders of the rights in the work of joint authorship

considered as a whole.

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The holder of the moral and economic rights in a collective work shall be the natural or

legal person on whose initiative and under whose responsibility the work was created and

who publishes it under his name.

ARTICLE 6 The authors of pseudonymous and anonymous works shall enjoy in such

works the rights afforded by Article 4 of the present Law.

They shall be represented in the exercise of those rights by the original editor or

publisher, until such time as they declare their identity and prove their authorship.

ARTICLE 7 The declaration referred to in the preceding paragraph may be made by

testament.

However, any rights previously acquired by third parties shall be retained.

The provisions of the second paragraph of the preceding Article and those of the above

paragraph shall not apply where the pseudonym adopted by the author leaves no doubt as

to his identity.

SECTION II PROTECTEDWORKS

ARTICLE 8 The following shall constitute works of the mind protected by the present

Law:

- books, brochures and other works expressed in writing, including computer

programs;

- lectures, addresses, sermons, pleadings and other works of that nature;

- works created for the stage or for broadcast (aural or visual), including dramatic

and dramatico-musical works as well as choreographic and mimed works, the

realization of which is fixed in writing or in another form;

- musical compositions with or without words;

- lithographic and pictorial works, drawings, etchings, woodcuts and other works

of that kind;

- sculptures, bas-reliefs and mosaics of all kinds;

- works of architecture, including drawings and models as well as the

construction

itself;

- tapestries and objects created through handicraft and applied art, including

sketches or models as well as the work itself;

- maps and illustrations and also graphic and three-dimensional drawings and

reproductions of an artistic or scientific nature;

- radio or audiovisual works;

- photographic works of an artistic or documentary nature, to which, for the

purposes of the present Law, works expressed by a process analogous to

photography are assimilated;

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- expressions of folklore and works derived from folklore, subject to such

particular provisions as may be established in a special law on protection of the

national heritage.

The following shall also be protected as works:

- translations, adaptations, arrangements and other transformations of works and

of expressions of folklore;

- collections of works, of expressions of folklore or of simple facts or data, such

as encyclopedias, anthologies and databases, whether reproduced in a machine-

readable medium or in any other form, which, by reason of the selection,

coordination or arrangement of their contents, constitute intellectual creations.

The protection of the works referred to in the preceding paragraph shall not affect the

protection of pre-existing works used in the making of such works.

Protection shall be independent of the mode or form of expression, of the quality and of

the purpose of the work.

ARTICLE 9 The protection afforded by the present Law shall not extend to:

- official texts of a legislative, administrative or judicial nature or to the official

translations thereof;

- the news of the day;

- ideas, processes, systems, methods of operation, concepts, principles,

discoveries or simple data, even if they are set out, described, explained,

illustrated or incorporated in a work.

ARTICLE 10 The title of a work, provided that it is original, shall be protected in the

same way as the work itself. Even where the work is no longer protected, no one may

use such title to identify a work in the same genre in circumstances likely to cause

confusion.

ARTICLE 11 Folklore shall belong by its origin to the national heritage.

"Work derived from folklore" means any work composed of elements borrowed from the

Beninese traditional cultural heritage.

TITLE III

NATIONAL BODY FOR THE PROTECTION OF COPYRIGHT AND

NEIGHBORING RIGHTS

ARTICLE 12 A public cultural institution with legal personality and financial autonomy

is hereby created.

This institution shall be responsible for the collective management and defense of the

rights set out in the present Law.

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It shall have capacity to manage, on the territory of the Republic of Benin, the economic

rights of authors and of the holders of neighboring rights as set out in the present Law, to

issue authorizations for exploitation and to collect the related royalties.

The provisions of the preceding paragraph shall in no circumstances prejudice the

capacity enjoyed by the authors of works and their successors in title, and by the holders

of neighboring rights, to exercise the rights afforded them by the present Law.

The statutes of the institution and the terms for the collection and distribution of royalties

shall be approved by a decree adopted by the Council of Ministers on the basis of a

proposal of the Minister of Culture.

TITLE IV

LIMITATIONS ON COPYRIGHT

ARTICLE 13 Where a work has been lawfully made accessible to the public, the author

may not prohibit private performances thereof given exclusively within the family circle

that do not generate any form of revenue, or given free of charge in a teaching

establishment for strictly educational or academic purposes, for the benefit of staff,

students and their families.

ARTICLE 14 Where a work has been lawfully published, the author may not prohibit

reproductions, translations or adaptations thereof intended for strictly personal and

private use.

The preceding paragraph shall not apply to:

- the reproduction of works of architecture in the form of buildings or other

similar constructions;

- the reprographic reproduction of an entire book or of a musical work in

graphical form (scores);

- the reproduction of the whole or of significant parts of databases in digital form;

- the reproduction of computer programs, except in the cases provided for in

Article 20 of the present Law;

- any other reproduction of a work that would prejudice the normal exploitation

of the work or would cause any prejudice to the legitimate interests of the author.

ARTICLE 15 On condition that the title of the work and the name of its author are

mentioned, analyses and short quotations from a work already lawfully made accessible

to the public shall be lawful, provided that they are compatible with fair practice and

insofar as they are justified by the intended scientific, critical, polemic, educational or

informatory purpose, including quotations from newspaper articles and periodicals in the

form of press summaries.

Such quotations and analyses may be used in the original version or in translation.

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ARTICLE 16 On condition that the author's name and the source are mentioned, and

provided that the right of reproduction has not been expressly reserved, the following

may be reproduced in the press, through broadcasting or television or by other means, for

information purposes:

- articles of a political, economic or sociocultural nature, published in the original

version or in translation;

- speeches intended for the public made at political, judicial, administrative or

religious gatherings, or at public meetings of a political nature or official

ceremonies.

ARTICLE 17 For the purpose of reporting of a current event by means of photography or

cinematography or through aural or visual broadcasting, the recording, reproduction and

public communication of literary or artistic works that may be seen or heard during such

event shall be lawful, to the extent justified by the intended informatory purpose.

ARTICLE 18 Reproduction for the purposes of cinematography, broadcast and public

communication of works of art and architecture that are permanently located in a public

place or whose inclusion in a film or broadcast is merely secondary or incidental to the

main subject matter shall be lawful.

ARTICLE 19 Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 4.2 of the present Law, a library

or archive service whose activities are not directly or indirectly profit-making may,

without the consent of the author or of any other holder of copyright, make individual

copies of a work by means of reprographic reproduction:

- where the work reproduced is an article or a short work or a short extract from a

written work other than a computer program, with or without illustration,

published in a collection of works or in an issue of a newspaper or periodical, and

where the purpose of reproduction is to fulfill the request of a natural person;

- where the making of such copy is for the purpose of preserving and, if

necessary, replacing it in the event that it is lost, destroyed or rendered unusable,

or for the purpose of replacing a copy that has been lost, destroyed or rendered

unusable in a permanent collection of another library or archive service.

ARTICLE 20 Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 4.2 of the present Law, the

lawful owner of a copy of a computer program may, without the consent of the author

and without payment of separate remuneration, make a copy or an adaptation of the

program, provided that such copy or adaptation is:

- necessary for the use of the computer program for the purposes for which the

program was obtained;

- necessary for the purpose of archiving and in order to replace a lawfully held

copy, where such copy has been lost, destroyed or rendered unusable.

No copy or adaptation may be made for purposes other than those expressly provided for,

and any copy or adaptation shall be destroyed if the prolonged possession of the copy of

the computer program ceases to be lawful.

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ARTICLE 21 Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 4.2 of the present Law, it shall be

permitted, without the consent of the author but subject to the requirement of indicating

the source and the name of the author if such name is given in the source:

- to use a lawfully published work as an illustration in publications, broadcasts or

sound or visual recordings intended for teaching;

- to reproduce, by reprographic means, for teaching or for examinations within

teaching establishments whose activities are not directly or indirectly profit-

making, and to the extent justified by the intended purpose, individual articles

lawfully published in a newspaper or periodical, and short extracts from a

lawfully published work or a lawfully published short work.

ARTICLE 22 The import of a copy of a work by a natural person for personal purposes

shall be permitted without the consent of the author or of any other holder of copyright in

the work.

ARTICLE 23 Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 4.2 of the present Law, a

broadcasting organization may, without the consent of the author and without payment of

separate remuneration, make an ephemeral recording, by means of its own facilities and

for the purposes of its own broadcasts, of a work that it is authorized to broadcast.

The broadcasting organization shall destroy such recording within six months of its

having been made, unless a longer period has been agreed with the author of the work

thus recorded. However, without such agreement, a single copy of such recording may

be kept for the exclusive purpose of conservation of archives.

TITLE V

TRANSFER OF COPYRIGHT

ARTICLE 24 Economic rights shall be assignable by transfer intra vivos and by

testament or by the effect of law by reason of death.

Moral rights shall not be assignable intra vivos but may be assigned by testament or by

the effect of law by reason of death.

ARTICLE 25 The author of a work may grant licenses to other persons to carry out the

acts covered by his economic rights. Such licenses may be non-exclusive or exclusive.

A non-exclusive license shall entitle its holder to perform, in the manner authorized to

him, the acts that it concerns at the same time as the author and other holders of non-

exclusive licenses.

An exclusive license shall entitle its holder, to the exclusion of any other person,

including the author, to carry out, in the manner authorized to him, the acts that it

concerns.

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No license may be deemed an exclusive license unless expressly stipulated in the contract

between the author and the license holder.

ARTICLE 26 Unless otherwise provided, contracts for assignment of economic rights or

licenses to carry out the acts covered by the economic rights shall be concluded in

writing.

ARTICLE 27 The assignment of economic rights and licenses to carry out the acts

covered by the economic rights may be limited to certain specific rights or limited with

respect to aims, duration, territorial applicability, scope of means of exploitation.

Failure to mention the territorial applicability for which the economic rights are assigned

or the license is granted to carry out acts covered by the economic rights shall be deemed

to limit the assignment or the license to the country in which the assignment is made or

the license granted.

Failure to mention the scope or the means of exploitation for which the economic rights

are assigned or the license is granted to carry out acts covered by the economic rights

shall be deemed to limit the assignment or the license to the scope and means of

exploitation necessary for the aims referred to when the assignment was made or the

license granted.

ARTICLE 28 The assignment by the author of his economic rights shall include a

proportional share of the revenue from sale or exploitation for the benefit of the author.

The author's remuneration may, however, be a lump sum in cases where:

- it is impossible in practice to determine the basis for calculating a share;

- the monitoring costs would be disproportionate to the desired results;

- the use of the work is merely incidental to the subject of the exploitation.

ARTICLE 29 An author who transfers an original or a copy of his work by sale shall be

deemed, unless otherwise stipulated in the contract, to have assigned none of his

economic rights nor to have granted a license for carrying out the acts covered by the

economic rights.

Notwithstanding paragraph 1 above, the legitimate acquirer of an original or a copy of a

work, unless otherwise stipulated in the contract, shall enjoy the right of presentation of

such original or copy directly to the public.

TITLE VI

AUDIOVISUAL AND RADIOWORKS

CHAPTER I

AUDIOVISUALWORKS

ARTICLE 30 In the case of an audiovisual work, the first holders of the moral and

economic rights shall be the joint authors of the work, such as the director, the

13

scriptwriter, the author of the adaptation and the composer of the music. The authors of

pre-existing works adapted or used for audiovisual works shall be deemed to be

assimilated to such joint authors.

ARTICLE 31 Except as otherwise provided, the contract concluded between the producer

of an audiovisual work and the joint authors of such work, other than the authors of

musical works included therein, with respect to the contributions of the joint authors to

the realization of the work, shall imply assignment to the producer of the economic rights

of the joint authors in their contributions.

ARTICLE 32 However, the joint authors shall maintain, unless otherwise stipulated in

the contract, their economic rights in other uses of their contributions to the extent that

such contributions may be used separately from the audiovisual work and do not

prejudice the normal exploitation of the work.

ARTICLE 33 An audiovisual work shall be deemed completed when the first "master

copy" has been established by mutual agreement between the director or, where

appropriate, the joint authors, on the one hand, and the producer, on the other.

Destruction of the master copy version shall be prohibited.

Any alteration to such version through the addition, removal or change of any element

thereof shall require the agreement of the persons referred to in the first paragraph.

ARTICLE 34 Where one of the intellectual creators of an audiovisual work refuses to

complete his contribution to such work or is unable to complete it owing to force

majeure, he may not object to the use of that part of his contribution already in existence

for the purpose of completion of the work.

CHAPTER II

RADIOWORKS

ARTICLE 35 The natural person or persons responsible for the intellectual creation of a

radio work shall be regarded as the author or authors of that work.

ARTICLE 36 Where a radio work is based on a pre-existing work, the authors of the

original work shall be deemed joint authors of the new work.

TITLE VII

AUTHORS' CONTRACTS

CHAPTER I

PRINCIPLES

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ARTICLE 37 Contracts under which the author or his successors in title authorize the

performance or publication of their works shall be concluded in writing, on pain of

invalidity. The same shall apply to performance authorizations granted free of charge.

Such contracts shall mention the mode of exploitation and the mode of remuneration

determined by the author or his successors in title. They shall be subject to the laws and

regulations in force.

Where special circumstances demand, contracts may be validly entered into by various

means of communication, confirmed in writing in good and due form, provided that the

sphere of exploitation of the rights assigned is established in accordance with Article 27

of the present Law.

CHAPTER II

PUBLISHING CONTRACTS

ARTICLE 38 Any publication or production of literary or artistic works shall be the

subject of a publishing contract duly signed by the publisher or the producer and the

author or his successors in title.

ARTICLE 39 A publishing contract shall be a contract under which the author of a work

or his successors in title assign to a publisher, under specified conditions, the right to

make or have made sufficient graphic, mechanical or other copies of the work, whereby

the publisher is required to publish and disseminate such copies.

The form and mode of expression, the conditions for carrying out the publication and the

termination clauses shall be laid down in the contract.

ARTICLE 40 A publishing contract must indicate the minimum number of copies

constituting the first print run.

It shall provide for remuneration proportional to the proceeds of exploitation, except in

the event of remuneration in a lump sum in accordance with Article 28 of the present

Law.

ARTICLE 41 The publisher may not transfer the enjoyment of the publishing contract to

a third party, either free of charge or against payment or as a contribution to the assets of

a partnership, without first having obtained the author's consent.

In the event of the disposal of the publishing business in such a way as seriously to

compromise the author's material or moral interests, the author shall be entitled to obtain

reparation even in the form of termination of the contract.

Where the publishing business was operated as a partnership or a joint enterprise, the

award of the business to one of the former partners or one of the co-owners as a result of

liquidation or division shall in no circumstances be considered assignment.

15

ARTICLE 42 In the case of a fixed-term contract, the rights of the assignee shall lapse

automatically on expiry of the term in question without the need for formal notice.

In the three years after such expiry the publisher may, however, sell off, at the normal

price, the copies remaining in stock, unless the author prefers to buy such copies at a

price that shall be determined in accordance with expert opinion, in the absence of an

amicable agreement. This option, open to the first publisher, shall not prevent the author

from proceeding with a new edition within a period of 30 months.

ARTICLE 43 The publisher shall be required to furnish the author with all evidence

necessary to establish the accuracy of his accounts.

In the absence of special terms laid down in the contract, the author may require the

publisher to produce, at least once a year, a statement indicating the number of copies

made during the financial year and specifying the date and size of the print runs, the

number of copies in stock, the number of copies sold by the publisher, the number of

copies used for advertising, the number of copies used or destroyed by accident or owing

to force majeure, and the amount of royalties owed or, where applicable, paid to the

author.

Any contrary provision shall be deemed void.

Neither the bankruptcy nor the court-ordered liquidation of the publisher shall entail the

termination of the contract.

The receiver may not undertake the remaindering or other disposal of copies that have

been made until at least fifteen (15) days after notifying the author of his intention by

registered letter with a request for acknowledgment of receipt.

The author shall have a right of pre-emption in respect of all or some of the copies. In the

absence of agreement, the buyback price shall be determined in accordance with expert

opinion.

ARTICLE 44 A publishing contract shall come to an end, irrespective of the situations

provided for in ordinary law or in the preceding Articles, when the publisher destroys all

the copies.

The contract shall be terminated automatically where, when the author has formally

notified the publisher of an appropriate deadline, the publisher has not published the work

or, where it is out of print, republished it.

A publication shall be deemed out of print where two requests for delivery of copies

addressed to the publisher have not been fulfilled within three (3) months.

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Where, in the event of the author's death, a work is incomplete, the contract shall be

terminated in respect of the unfinished part of the work, except as otherwise agreed

between the publisher and the author's successors in title.

ARTICLE 45 The author shall deliver to the publisher, within the period stipulated in the

contract, the work to be published in a form permitting manufacture.

ARTICLE 46 A contract known as a contract "at the author's expense" shall not

constitute a publishing contract within the meaning of Article 39.

Under such contract, the author or his successors in title shall pay to the publisher an

agreed remuneration against which the publisher shall make a sufficient number of copies

of the work in the form and in accordance with the modes of expression specified in the

contract, and shall publish and disseminate such copies.

Such contract shall constitute a contract for services governed by convention, usage and

the laws and regulations in force.

ARTICLE 47 A contract known as a contract "at joint expense" shall not constitute a

publishing contract within the meaning of Article 39.

Under such contract, the author or his successors in title shall commission a publisher to

make, at his expense, a sufficient number of copies of the work in the form and in

accordance with the modes of expression specified in the contract, and to publish and

disseminate such copies in accordance with the agreement reciprocally contracted to

share the profits and losses of exploitation in the proportion agreed in the contract.

Such contract shall constitute a joint undertaking.

CHAPTER III

PERFORMANCE CONTRACTS

ARTICLE 48 A performance contract shall be a contract under which the author of a

work of the mind, his successors in title or the collective management organization

provided for in the present Law authorize(s) a natural or legal person to perform said

work under conditions that they stipulate.

A contract under which the author or the collective management organization provided

for in Article 12 of the present Law affords to an entertainment promoter the capacity to

perform, during the term of the contract, the author's works or the works that constitute

the repertoire of said collective management organization under the conditions specified

shall be known as a general performance contract.

ARTICLE 49 A performance contract shall be concluded for a specified period or for a

limited number of communications to the public.

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Unless exclusive rights are expressly provided for, no monopoly on exploitation shall be

conferred on the entertainment promoter .

An entertainment promoter may not transfer the enjoyment of his contract without formal

consent given in writing by the author or his representative or the collective management

organization provided for in the present Law.

The period of validity of the exclusive rights afforded by a playwright may not exceed

five years; the suspension of performances for two consecutive years shall automatically

put an end to it.

ARTICLE 50 "Entertainment promoter" means any natural or legal person who or which,

occasionally or on a permanent basis, performs or arranges for the performance of works

protected under the present Law, in an establishment open to the public and by any means

whatsoever.

Any author, artist or group of artists that occasionally or on a permanent basis performs

its own repertoire shall also be deemed an entertainment promoter.

ARTICLE 51 An entertainment promoter shall be required to:

- obtain prior consent from the author or the collective management organization

provided for in the present Law;

- inform the author or his successors in title or the collective management

organization provided for in the present Law of the exact program of public

performances and of works performed;

- furnish the author or his successors in title or the collective management

organization with a certified statement of his takings;

- pay the author or his successors in title or the collective management

organization the stipulated amount of royalties;

- ensure that the technical conditions are such as to safeguard the intellectual and

moral rights of the author.

TITLE VIII

TERM OF PROTECTION

ARTICLE 52 Copyright shall last for the author's lifetime and for seventy (70) calendar

years as from the end of the year of his death.

ARTICLE 53 The economic rights in a work of joint authorship shall be protected for the

lifetime of the last surviving author and for seventy (70) years as from the end of the year

of his death.

ARTICLE 54 The economic rights in a work published anonymously, posthumously or

under a pseudonym shall be protected until the expiry of a period of seventy (70) years as

from the end of the calendar year in which such work was lawfully published for the first

time or, failing such event occurring during the seventy (70) years following the making

18

of the work, seventy (70) years as from the end of the calendar year in which such work

was made accessible to the public or, failing such event occurring during the seventy (70)

years following the making of the work, seventy (70) years as from the end of the

calendar year of its making.

Where, prior to the expiry of such period, the identity of the author is disclosed or leaves

no doubt, the provisions of Article 52 shall apply.

ARTICLE 55 The economic rights in a collective work or in an audiovisual work shall be

protected until the expiry of a period of seventy (70) years as from the end of the calendar

year in which such work was lawfully published for the first time or, failing such event

occurring during the seventy (70) years following the making of the work, seventy (70)

years as from the end of the calendar year in which such work was made accessible to the

public or, failing such event occurring during the seventy (70) years following the

making of the work, seventy (70) years as from the end of the calendar year of its

making.

ARTICLE 56 The economic rights in a work of applied art shall be protected until the

expiry of a period of twenty-five (25) years following the making of such work.

TITLE IX

DOMAINE PUBLIC PAYANT

ARTICLE 57 Upon expiry of the periods of protection referred to in Articles 52 to 56,

during which an exclusive right is afforded to and held by the authors or their heirs or

successors in title, the author's works shall fall into the public domain.

ARTICLE 58 The performance of works in the public domain shall be subject to:

- respect for moral rights;

- a prior declaration to the collective management organization;

- the payment of a royalty to the collective management organization, which shall

be used for cultural and welfare purposes for the benefit of the authors.

The right to perform works in the public domain shall be administered by the collective

management organization.

The amount of the royalty shall be laid down in regulations.

TITLE X

NEIGHBORING RIGHTS TO COPYRIGHT

ARTICLE 59 The rights of performers, producers of phonograms and broadcasting

organizations, known as neighboring rights, shall in no circumstances prejudice

copyright.

19

Consequently, no provision in the present Title shall be interpreted in such a way as to

limit the exercise of copyright by the holders thereof.

ARTICLE 60 Subject to the provisions of Articles 69 to 71 of the present Law, a

performer shall have the exclusive right to prohibit or authorize the following acts:

- the broadcasting of his performance, except where the broadcast is made by

means of a fixation of the performance other than a fixation made under Article

70 of the present Law or where it is a retransmission authorized by the

broadcasting organization that was the first to transmit the performance;

- the communication to the public of his performance, except where such

communication is made by means of a fixation of the performance or a broadcast

of the performance;

- the fixation of his unfixed performance;

- the reproduction of a fixation of his performance;

- the first distribution to the public of a fixation of his performance by sale or by

any other act whereby ownership is transferred, sale not in itself being a transfer

of ownership;

- the rental to the public or public lending of a fixation of his performance;

- the making available to the public, by wire or wireless means, of his

performance fixed in a phonogram in such a way that members of the public may

access it from a place and at a time individually chosen by them.

ARTICLE 61 Authorization to broadcast a performance of a work shall not imply

authorization to permit other broadcasting organizations to broadcast the performance or

authorization to fix said performance.

ARTICLE 62 Authorization to broadcast and fix the performance shall not imply

authorization to reproduce the fixation.

ARTICLE 63 Authorization to fix the performance and to reproduce the fixation shall not

imply authorization to broadcast the performance by means of the fixation or of

reproductions thereof.

ARTICLE 64 Independently of a performer’s economic rights, and even after the

assignment of those rights, the performer shall, as regards his live sound performances or

performances fixed in phonograms, have the right to demand to be identified as the

performer of his performances, except where omission of such is dictated by the manner

of the use of the performance, and to object to any distortion, mutilation or other

modification of his performances that would be prejudicial to his reputation.

The moral rights of the performer shall be without limit in time. They shall be

imprescriptible, inalienable and transferable by reason of death to his heirs or conferred

on a third party by testament. They shall not be assignable intra vivos but may be

assigned by testament or by the effect of law by reason of death.

20

ARTICLE 65 Subject to the provisions of Articles 69 to 71 of the present Law, a

phonogram producer shall have the exclusive right to carry out or authorize the following

acts:

- the direct or indirect reproduction of his phonogram;

- the import of copies of his phonogram with a view to the distribution thereof to

the public;

- the first distribution to the public of copies of his phonogram by sale or by any

other act whereby ownership is transferred, sale not in itself being a transfer of

ownership;

- the rental to the public or public lending of copies of his phonogram;

- the making available to the public, by wire or wireless means, of his phonogram

in such a way that members of the public may access it from a place and at a time

individually chosen by them.

ARTICLE 66 Subject to the provisions of Articles 69 to 71 of the present Law, a

broadcasting organization shall have the exclusive right to carry out or authorize the

following acts:

- the retransmission of its broadcast programs;

- the fixation of its broadcast programs;

- the reproduction of a fixation of its broadcast programs;

- the communication to the public of its television programs.

ARTICLE 67 The rights afforded to producers and broadcasting organizations under

Articles 64 and 65 of the present Law shall in no circumstances affect the rights of

authors or performers.

TITLE XI

EQUITABLE REMUNERATION FOR THE USE OF PHONOGRAMS

ARTICLE 68 Where a phonogram published for commercial purposes, or a reproduction

of such phonogram, is used directly for broadcasting or communication to the public, a

single equitable remuneration, intended both for the performers and for the producer of

the phonogram, shall be paid by the user to the organization responsible for collective

management provided for in Article 12 of the present Law.

The amount collected from the user of a phonogram shall be shared; 50 per cent shall go

to the producer and 50 per cent to the performers.

The performers shall share the amount received from the producer or shall use it in

accordance with the agreements that exist between them.

TITLE XII

FREE USES

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ARTICLE 69 Notwithstanding the provisions of Articles 60 to 66 of the present Law, the

following acts shall be permitted without the consent of the entitled persons referred to in

those Articles:

- private use;

- reporting on current events, on condition that use is made only of short

fragments of a performance, a phonogram or a broadcast program;

- use solely for purposes of teaching or scientific research;

- quotation, in the form of short fragments, from a performance, a phonogram or

a broadcast program, on condition that such quotations are compatible with fair

practice and are justified by their informatory purpose;

- all other uses that constitute exceptions with respect to works protected by

copyright under the present Law.

ARTICLE 70 Once performers have authorized the incorporation of their performances

in fixations of images or images and sounds, the provisions of Article 61 of the present

Law shall cease to apply.

ARTICLE 71 The authorizations required under Articles 60 to 66 of the present Law for

making fixations of performances and of broadcast programs and for reproducing such

fixations and reproducing phonograms published for commercial purposes shall not be

required where the fixation or the reproduction has been made by a broadcasting

organization using its own facilities and for its own programs, provided that:

- for each broadcast of a fixation of a performance or of reproductions thereof

made under this Article, the broadcasting organization is entitled to broadcast the

performance concerned;

- for each broadcast of a fixation of a program or of a reproduction of such

fixation made under the first paragraph, the broadcasting organization is entitled

to broadcast the program;

- for any fixation made under the first paragraph or reproductions thereof, the

fixation and the reproductions thereof are destroyed within a period of the same

duration as that applying to fixations and reproductions of protected works made

as part of an ephemeral recording, with the exception of a single copy which may

be kept for exclusive purpose of archive conservation.

TITLE XIII

TERM OF PROTECTION OF NEIGHBORING RIGHTS

ARTICLE 72 The term of protection afforded to performances under the present Law

shall be fifty (50) years as from:

- the end of the year of fixation for performances fixed in phonograms;

- the end of the year in which the performance took place for performances not

fixed in phonograms.

The term of protection afforded to phonograms under the present Law shall be fifty (50)

years as from the end of the year in which the phonogram was published, or where no

22

such publication takes place within fifty (50) years of fixation of the phonogram, fifty

(50) years as from the end of the year of fixation.

ARTICLE 73 The term of protection afforded to broadcasts under the present Law shall

be twenty-five (25) years as from the end of the year in which the broadcast took place.

TITLE XIV

PRIVATE COPYING

ARTICLE 74 The authors of literary and artistic works, performers in respect of their

performances fixed in phonograms, and phonogram producers shall be entitled to

remuneration for the reproduction of such works, performances and phonograms intended

for strictly personal and private use and made in accordance with the provisions of

Articles 14 and 69 of the present Law.

ARTICLE 75 Equitable remuneration for reproduction intended for private purposes in

the cases provided for in Article 74 above shall be paid by the manufacturers and

importers of physical media used for such reproduction; it shall be collected and

distributed by the collective management organization provided for in the present Law.

ARTICLE 76 The procedures for collection and the amounts of such remuneration shall

be laid down in regulations.

ARTICLE 77 The equitable remuneration payable to authors, performers and producers

of phonograms under Articles 74 and 75 of the present Law shall be distributed among

these three categories of entitled persons.

ARTICLE 78 The physical media referred to in Article 75 of the present Law shall be

exempt from payment of equitable remuneration where they are exported or where they

cannot be used normally for the reproduction of works intended for private purposes.

ARTICLE 79 Where the reproduction referred to in Article 74 of the present Law is

effected by photocopying and where apparatuses intended for making such copies are

made available to the public in schools, teaching establishments, research institutions,

public libraries or establishments that make such apparatuses available against payment,

the author shall also be entitled to remuneration, which shall be paid to the collective

management organization by the user of the apparatus.

TITLE XV

PROTECTION OF EXPRESSIONS OF FOLKLORE

ARTICLE 80 Expressions of folklore shall be protected against reproduction,

communication to the public by means of performance, broadcast, distribution by cable

or other means, adaptation, translation or any other transformation, where such uses are

carried out for commercial purposes or outside their traditional or customary context.

23

ARTICLE 81 The acts covered by the preceding Article shall be subject to the prior

authorization of the collective management organization provided for in Article 12 of the

present Law, against payment of a royalty, the amount of which shall be determined in

accordance with the customary terms in each of the categories of creation considered.

ARTICLE 82 The rights conferred under the present Title shall not apply where the acts

in question concern:

- use by a natural person exclusively for personal purposes;

- the use of short extracts for the purpose of reporting of current events, to the

extent justified by the subject of the report;

- use solely for purposes of teaching or scientific research;

- cases in which a work may be used without the consent of the author or of

another copyright holder.

ARTICLE 83 In all printed publications, and in connection with any communication to

the public of an identifiable expression of folklore, the source of such expression of

folklore must be indicated in a manner that is appropriate and compatible with fair

practice, by mentioning the community and the geographical place of origin of the

expression of folklore used.

ARTICLE 84 The royalties collected under the present Title shall be used for cultural

development activities.

ARTICLE 85 The use, without the prior authorization of the collective management

organization, of an expression of folklore in a manner not permitted under the present

Law shall constitute an offense of infringement and shall be subject to the penalties

provided for under the present Law.

TITLE XVI

PROCEEDINGS AND PENALTIES

CHAPTER I

PROCEEDINGS

ARTICLE 86 Any dispute arising from the enforcement of contracts for reproduction,

publication or public performance of literary and artistic works and creations protected by

neighboring rights shall be referred to the collective management organization for

attempted conciliation.

ARTICLE 87 In the event of failure of such conciliation, the parties shall have the right

to refer the case to the competent court, either directly or through the collective

management organization.

ARTICLE 88 The collective management organization shall have capacity to institute

legal proceedings in defense of the rights relating to the literary and artistic works and the

creations protected by neighboring rights that constitute its repertoire and that of the

24

collective management organizations of other States that it represents on the territory of

the Republic of Benin.

ARTICLE 89 Infringements of the laws and regulations relating to copyright and

neighboring rights may be recorded by a sworn agent of the collective management

organization or any other agent authorized for that purpose.

Where necessary, such agents shall be assisted by the police.

ARTICLE 90 In the event of an infringement of the rights provided for in the present

Law, the persons referred to in Article 89 may, on the basis of a decision of the collective

management organization or a decision of the competent court:

- carry out the infringement seizure of all illegal copies and objects used in the

commission of the infringement that are subject to confiscation;

- retain any document relating to the seized objects;

- carry out preventive seizure of objects that may be used as security for

penalties;

- seize copies of works or aural recordings suspected of having been made or

imported without the consent of the protected rightholder, and also the packaging

of such copies and the tools used to make them.

They shall prepare a report on the above.

ARTICLE 91 Depending on the nature and seriousness of the recorded infringements, the

seizure report shall give rise to:

- monetary settlements with the collective management organization; or

- judicial proceedings.

ARTICLE 92 The settlement amount shall be determined and the infringers notified

thereof by the collective management organization. It shall be collected within fifteen

(15) days of the date of notification.

ARTICLE 93 In the event of non-payment of the settlement amount within the period

specified above, the case shall be referred to the Public Prosecutor with territorial

jurisdiction, who shall initiate flagrante delicto public proceedings.

ARTICLE 94 The report referred to in Article 91 of the present Law shall set out in

particular:

- the place and date of the infringement seizure and the reason therefor;

- the names, statuses and addresses of the officers who carried out the operation;

- the nature and number of objects seized;

- the presence of the presumed respondent or his summons to attend;

- all information on the place of custody of the seized objects;

- the place where the report was prepared and the time of its closure;

- the signature of the author and, where appropriate, that of the respondent or his

representative.

25

ARTICLE 95 Police detectives and criminal investigation officers shall be required, at

the time of the first requisitioning, to assist in the recording of copyright infringements.

They shall act ex officio or at the request of the author or his successors in title or at the

request of the collective management organization or on the basis of a judicial decision,

and shall carry out the infringement seizure of all illegal copies and of objects used in the

commission of the infringement in violation of the present Law and subsequent

instruments.

Through appropriate channels, the police detective or criminal investigation officer

required to do so shall inform the Public Prosecutor within twenty-four (24) hours of the

end of the operation.

Where the seizure is deemed unfounded on the basis of a judicial decision, only the

person who requested the operation shall be held liable.

ARTICLE 96 The official report on the operation, together with all items necessary for

an understanding thereof and the objects seized, shall be transmitted to the Public

Prosecutor by the police detective or criminal investigation officer who carried out the

seizure within five working days thereof, on request as referred to in Article 95 of the

present Law.

ARTICLE 97 Where the desired effect of the seizure referred to in Article 90 of the

present Law is to delay or suspend public performances that are in progress or have

already been announced, special authorization must be obtained from the President of the

court of first instance by an order issued on request. The President of the court of first

instance may also, in the same manner, order:

- the suspension of any manufacturing or public performance in progress or

announced that constitutes an infringement or an act preparatory to infringement;

- the seizure, even outside the times specified in the Code of Civil Procedure, of

copies constituting an unlawful reproduction of a work that has been or is being

made, of the revenue obtained, and of equipment used for that purpose;

- the seizure of the revenue from any reproduction, performance or broadcast, by

any means whatsoever, of a work of the mind, effected in infringement of

copyright as set out in the present Law.

In the orders referred to above, the President of the court may order the distrainer to

deposit an appropriate sum first.

The provisions of the present Article shall also apply in the event of improper

exploitation of folklore or of the right of performance of a work that has fallen into the

public domain.

ARTICLE 98 Within 30 days of the date of the seizure report referred to in Article 90 of

the present Law or of the date of the order referred to in Article 97 of the present Law,

26

the distrainee or the garnishee may request the President of the court to order the release

of the seizure, to limit its effects or to authorize the resumption of manufacture or of

public performances, under the authority of an administrator appointed custodian of the

proceeds of such manufacture or exploitation.

Where the President of the court allows the request of the distrainee or the garnishee, he

may, hearing the case in chambers, order the applicant to deposit a sum as security

against any damages to which the author or any other holder of copyright or neighboring

rights may be entitled.

ARTICLE 99 Measures ordered pursuant to Article 96 of the present Law shall be lifted

automatically in the event of a non-suit or discharge.

ARTICLE 100 Where the distrainer fails to refer the matter to the competent court within

30 days of the seizure, the release of the seizure may be ordered at the request of the

distrainee or the garnishee by the President of the court, hearing the case in chambers.

ARTICLE 101 Where the proceeds of exploitation owed to the author of a work of the

mind or a performer have been garnished, the President of the court may, where

appropriate, order payment to the author or the performer of a sum or a specified

proportion of the sums garnished.

ARTICLE 102 Objects that are confiscated, seized or forfeited shall be disposed of by the

collective management organization, where the judgment of confiscation or seizure has

become res judicata, or, in the event of a default judgment, where provisional execution

has been ordered by judgment of confiscation or seizure or after confirmation of

forfeiture agreed by settlement.

ARTICLE 103 Proceedings resulting from an infringement of copyright or of

neighboring rights recorded in a seizure report or infringement seizure report shall be

brought before the court within whose jurisdiction the infringement was recorded.

ARTICLE 104 The provisions of ordinary law relating to flagrante delicto proceedings

before the criminal courts shall be applied to infringements of copyright, related

infringements and matters raised as a defense.

ARTICLE 105 Reports relating to infringements of copyright and neighboring rights

prepared by the persons designated in Articles 89 and 90 of the present Law, with the

exception of senior police detectives and criminal investigation officers, shall be

authoritative unless the material facts that they contain are contested. They shall be

authoritative only where the accuracy and sincerity of the admissions and statements that

they report are not disproved.

ARTICLE 106 Reports prepared by senior police detectives and criminal investigation

officers shall be authoritative unless proved otherwise.

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ARTICLE 107 Reports on seizures, infringement seizures and settlements with regard to

copyright and neighboring rights shall be exempt from stamp duty and registration

formalities.

CHAPTER II

PENALTIES

ARTICLE 108 Any publication, reproduction, performance or broadcast for commercial

purposes on the territory of the Republic of Benin of a protected work or performance in

infringement of copyright and neighboring rights shall constitute an offense of

infringement of a work of the mind, as set out in and punished in accordance with the

provisions of the present Law.

ARTICLE 109 The reproduction of literary and artistic works without the prior consent

of the holders of copyright and neighboring rights and of the collective management

organization provided for in Article 12 shall constitute piracy of literary and artistic

works.

Piracy of literary and artistic works shall be an offense. It shall be an infringement

punishable by the provisions of the present Law.

ARTICLE 110 The infringement, on Beninese territory, of works published in the

Republic of Benin or abroad, shall be punished with imprisonment for a term of three

months to two years and/or a fine of five hundred thousand (500,000) to ten million

(10,000,000) francs, without prejudice to the payment of damages to the victims.

The offenses of exporting and importing infringing works shall be punished with the

same penalties.

ARTICLE 111 Any reproduction, performance or broadcast, by any means whatsoever,

of a work of the mind or a creation that is protected by neighboring rights, without the

consent referred to in Article 4.2 of the present Law, shall be punished with the penalties

provided for in Article 110 of the present Law.

ARTICLE 112 Any fixation, reproduction, communication, making available to the

public either against payment or free of charge, or any broadcast of a performance or

program in infringement of the moral and economic rights afforded to authors or

performers shall also be punished with the penalties provided for in Article 110 of the

present Law.

ARTICLE 113 The marketing on the territory of the Republic of Benin of graphic and

three-dimensional works in infringement of the resale royalty right provided for in Article

4.2 of the present Law shall be punished with the penalties provided for in Article 110 of

the present Law.

ARTICLE 114 In the event of a repeat offense, the penalties incurred shall be doubled.

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In addition, the court may order the closure, either temporary – for a period not exceeding

five (05) years – or permanent, of the establishment operated by the offender.

Where such closure has been ordered, the staff shall receive compensation equal to their

salary, supplemented by all benefits in kind, during the period of the closure, up to a

maximum of six months.

Where collective or individual agreements provide for a higher amount of compensation

after redundancy, that is the sum that shall be payable.

Any infringement of the provisions of the first two paragraphs of the present Article shall

be punished by imprisonment for a term of one (01) to six (06) months and/or a fine of

five hundred thousand (500,000) to one million (1,000,000) francs.

In the event of a repeat offense, the penalties shall be doubled.

ARTICLE 115 In the cases provided for in Articles 110 to 114 of the present Law, the

court may order the confiscation of all or part of the revenue obtained as a result of the

infringement, and also the confiscation and destruction of all infringing or unlawfully

reproduced copies, and of equipment installed for the purpose of committing the offense.

It may also order the display of the judgment pronouncing the conviction and the

publication thereof in full or in the form of extracts in the newspapers, at the offender's

expense.

ARTICLE 116 In the cases provided for in Articles 110 to 115 of the present Law, the

equipment, infringing objects and revenue that have been confiscated shall be handed

over to the collective management organization in order to compensate the creators of

works of the mind for the damage done to them.

ARTICLE 117 Any natural or legal person shall be considered liable for unlawful

reproduction or communication to the public punishable under Article 112 of the present

Law, where he has allowed the reproduction or communication to the public, in his

establishment or in facilities under his responsibility, of works of the mind protected

under the present Law, without first having sought and received communication of

authorization from the collective management organization.

Any person who contributed materially to the commission of the infringement, whether

acting on instructions or not, shall be considered an accomplice.

ARTICLE 118 Anyone who exploits a work of folklore or the right to perform a work

that has fallen into the public domain and who fails to declare this in advance to the

collective management organization in accordance with Article 57 of the present Law

shall be punished with a fine equal to double the amount of revenue usually due.

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In all such cases, the amount of the fine shall be at least ten thousand (10,000) francs.

ARTICLE 119 Factual evidence of infringements of the regulations relating to the

protection of copyright and neighboring rights may be constituted by the statements of

sworn officials of the collective management organization pursuant to the Code of Penal

Procedure or the statements of police detectives.

ARTICLE 120 In the event of an infringement of the provisions of Article 4.2 of the

present Law, the purchaser and ministerial officials may be ordered, jointly and severally,

to pay damages to the beneficiaries of the resale royalty right.

ARTICLE 121 Authorities of all kinds, and in particular the police and the gendarmerie,

shall be required, at the request of representatives of the collective management

organization, to give their assistance and, where appropriate, their protection.

The competent authorities shall not grant entertainment promoters any license or other

permit before such promoters have produced the authorization issued by the collective

management organization.

ARTICLE 122 The performance, use, exploitation, broadcast, reproduction, publication

or marketing of any literary or artistic work shall be subject to ongoing monitoring by the

collective management organization.

During the course of such monitoring, the persons carrying out the activities referred to in

the paragraph above shall communicate to the sworn officials of the collective

management organization all the documents and information that they deem necessary

for the proper accomplishment of their task.

ARTICLE 123 Any obstruction of the proper conduct of the monitoring referred to in

Article 122 of the present Law shall be punished with the penalties provided for in

Article 110 of the present Law.

ARTICLE 124 The following acts shall be deemed unlawful and shall be assimilated to

an infringement of the rights of authors and of other holders of copyright:

- the making or import, for sale or rental, of a device or facility specially

designed or adapted to render inoperative any device or facility intended to

prevent or restrict the reproduction of a work or impair the quality of the copies

made;

- the making or import, for sale or rental, of a device or facility such as to permit

or facilitate the reception of an encoded program broadcast or communicated in

any other manner to the public by persons not entitled to receive it;

- the removal or alteration of any electronic rights management information

without authority;

- the distribution or import for distribution, broadcast, communication to the

public or making available to the public, without authority, of works,

performances, phonograms or broadcast programs, in the knowledge that

30

electronic rights management information has been removed or altered without

authority.

ARTICLE 125 Under the present Law, "rights management information" means

information which identifies the author, the work, the artist, the performer, the

performance, the producer of the phonogram, the phonogram, the broadcasting

organization, the broadcast program, and any rightholder pursuant to this Law, or any

information about the terms and conditions of use of the work and other productions

covered by the present Law, and any numbers or codes that represent such information,

where any of these items of information is attached to a copy of a work, a fixed

performance, a phonogram or a fixed broadcast program, or appears in connection with

the broadcast, the communication to the public or the making available to the public of a

work, a fixed performance, a phonogram or a broadcast program.

Any device or facility referred to in this Article and any copy on which rights

management information has been removed or altered shall be assimilated to infringing

copies of works.

TITLE XVII

MISCELLANEOUS AND FINAL PROVISIONS

ARTICLE 126 The provisions of the present Law relating to the protection of literary and

artistic works shall apply to:

- works of which the author or any other original holder of copyright is a national

of the Republic of Benin or has his habitual residence or headquarters in the

Republic of Benin;

- audiovisual works of which the producer is a national of the Republic of Benin

or has his habitual residence or his headquarters in the Republic of Benin;

- works published for the first time in the Republic of Benin or published for the

first time in another country and also published in the Republic of Benin within a

period of thirty (30) days;

- works of architecture erected in the Republic of Benin or works of fine art

incorporated in a building located in the Republic of Benin.

ARTICLE 127 The provisions of the present Law relating to the protection of literary and

artistic works shall apply to works that are entitled to protection pursuant to an

international treaty to which the Republic of Benin is a party.

ARTICLE 128 The provisions of the present Law relating to the protection of performers

shall apply to performances where:

- the performer is a national of the Republic of Benin;

- the performance takes place on the territory of the Republic of Benin;

- a performance that has not been fixed in a phonogram is incorporated in a

broadcast program that is protected under the present Law.

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ARTICLE 129 The provisions of the present Law relating to the protection of phonogram

producers shall apply to phonograms where:

- the producer is a national of the Republic of Benin;

- the first fixation of the sounds was done in the Republic of Benin;

- the phonogram was published for the first time in the Republic of Benin.

ARTICLE 130 The provisions of the present Law relating to the protection of

broadcasting organizations shall apply to broadcast programs where:

- the headquarters of the organization is located on the territory of the Republic

of Benin;

- the broadcast program was transmitted from a station located on the territory of

the Republic of Benin.

ARTICLE 131 The provisions of the present Law shall also apply to performances,

phonograms and broadcast programs that are protected pursuant to the international

agreements to which the Republic of Benin is a party.

ARTICLE 132 The provisions of the present Law shall also apply to works that were

created, to performances that took place or were fixed, to phonograms that were fixed and

to broadcasts that took place prior to the date of entry into force of the present Law,

provided that such works, performances, phonograms and broadcasts have not yet fallen

into the public domain by reason of the expiry of the term of protection which they

enjoyed under the preceding legislation or under the legislation of their country of origin.

The legal effects of acts and contracts concluded or stipulated prior to the date of entry

into force of the present Law shall remain unaffected.

ARTICLE 133 All disputes relating to the implementation of the present Law shall be

brought before the competent courts.

ARTICLE 134 The time periods provided for in the present Law shall be clear days.

ARTICLE 135 All earlier provisions that conflict with the present Law, in particular

those of Law No. 84-008 of March 15, 1984, on Copyright Protection in the Republic of

Benin, are hereby repealed.

ARTICLE 136 The present Law shall be enforced as the law of the land.

Done at Cotonou, April 5, 2006

By the President of the Republic, Head of State, Head of the Government

(signed)

Dr Boni YAYI

The Minister of Development, Economy and Finance

(signed)

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Pascal Irénée KOUPAKI

The Acting Minister of Justice, responsible for relations with institutions, Government

spokesperson

(signed)

Venance GNIGLA

The Minister of Culture, Sport and Leisure

(signed)

Théophile MONTCHO

The Minister of Public Security and Local Communities

(signed)

Edgard Charlemagne ALIA

The Minister of National Defense

(signed)

Issifou Kogui N'DOURO

The Minister responsible for the Budget under the Minister of Development, Economy

and Finance

(signed)

Albert Sègbégnon HOUNGBO