Tanzania’s John Kitime optimistic about copyright law
By In-house East Africa
30 Nov 2017 - 09:36
Veteran Tanzanian musician and secretary-general of the Tanzania Music Federation, John Kitime, has spoken up about copyright law in the country after the two-day Copyright and Digital Environment Seminar.
Local stakeholders from creative industries and officials from the Copyright Society of Tanzania (COSOTA) attended the meeting. Representatives from Nigeria, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Kenya, South Africa, Liberia, Malawi, Namibia, Rwanda and the Zanzibar Isles also participated in the seminar that was on 27 and 28 November in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Kitime stressed the importance of knowledge and how musicians could use it to their advantage. However, he pointed out that local artists who did not understand that copyright law was central to their art would not see the importance of attending such events.
“We have a problem. There were artists who were invited to the seminar but none of them turned up,” he said, adding that the few who have managed to monetise their art have never come across copyright.
He said that in the digital age artists should be able to control their creations as they did not need middlemen.
During the seminar, the stakeholders agreed that the copyright office should be separated from the collective management organisation in order for the former to supervise the latter.
Addressing the participants, COSOTA CEO Doreen Anthony said more awareness programmes needed to be created.
“Copyright deals with an area where development is growing very fast,” she said. The licensing areas are increasing every day. Therefore, it would be a waste of time if we only concentrated on a few rights while other new areas came up.”
Despite the no-show from artists, Kitime remains optimistic that with new legislation taking effect, TV and radio broadcasters will finally begin complying with copyright law and that artists will start reaping the benefits of their hard work.
Most popular
Open call: AIR Festival 2026 seeks local talent in Knysna
04 Feb 2026
AI music firms, major labels clash over ‘Walled Garden’ model
04 Feb 2026
YouTube restricts background play to Premium users across all browsers
04 Feb 2026
Bruce Resnikoff appointed UMe chairman, Jamie Krents named CEO
04 Feb 2026
Interview: South African artist Nomisupasta
03 Feb 2026
Apple Music flags 2 billion fraudulent streams amid AI audio surge
03 Feb 2026
Sponsored
Disclaimer: Music In Africa provides a platform for musicians and contributors to embed music and videos solely for promotional purposes. If any track or video embedded on this platform violates any copyrights please inform us immediately and we will take it down. Please read our Terms of Use for more.
Please log in to post a comment.