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COSON: Omorogbe, others say Okoroji hiding stench in critically sick CMO

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Tony Okoroji, COSON Chairman
COSON chairman, Chief Tony Okoroji

 

Admin I Saturday, July 15, 2023

 

LAGOS, Nigeria – Contrary to what the Tony Okoroji-led board is desperately trying to sell, the Federal High Court ruling of July 12, 2023, by the Honourable Justice Olayinka Faji on SUIT NO. : FCH/L/CS/1778/2018 is not definitive in the context of the fundamentals of the COSON chairman/board matter.

According to Omorogbe, no court has determined who the rightful chairman/board members of COSON are. All that the court decided was that since the Enugu case was filed first, the parties ought to see that through one way or another before starting another one in Lagos. 

“The court did not hear arguments on or decide on any issues regarding the chairmanship of COSON and those issues remain live. The Enugu case is still pending and the process will resume after the court vacation.

“While the case to determine the legality or otherwise of the purported reinstatement of Tony Okoroji is important and pending, the real concern of stakeholders should be the disheartening state of ruin COSON has been plunged into by the board”, the court statement added. 

According to him, among the litany of woes besetting the once admirable CMO, Efe Omorogbe  said in the statement in behalf of Dare ‘Baba Dee’ Fasasi, Obi Asika, Audu Maikori, Sikiru Agbola and Joel Ajayi are (i) Failure to secure renewal of its operating licence since it expired in 2018.

(ii) Failure to publish the report of the forensic audit the board claimed it commissioned KPMG to execute since 2020.

(iii) Failure to carry out specific distribution of royalties to key members since 2018.

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(vi) Failure to resolve the general distribution impasse since the November 2020 Federal High Court ruling declared the practice illegal. 

(iv) Suspension from CISAC – the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers –  and loss of reciprocal partner status with PRS and other international organizations. 

(v) COSON’s pariah status has also been compounded by IPFI’s  (The International Federation of the Photographic Industry) decision to distance itself from the Nigerian C.M.O. 

(vi) Loss of significant local repertoire and failure to attract the key new and emerging talents and rights holders.

(vii) Consistent and worsening hemorrhaging due to dwindling collections and rising administration cost. In 2021 COSON reported a royalty income of N113,655,507 and an administration cost of N123,682,588, a deficit of N10,027,081.

Omorogbe said the resolution of these and other serious problems choking the life out of COSON should be the focus of well-meaning stakeholders.

“The board’s obsession with self-aggrandizing spin-doctoring is nothing but an attempt to distract the public from the conduct and actions of individuals that have crippled COSON and done tremendous harm to the collective management of copyright in Nigeria”, he said. 

 

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