Questions are being asked in Canada after it was revealed that the director
general of copyright policy at
Canadian
Heritage had allegedly been in a relationship with one of Canada's leading
copyright lobbyists.
The
Hill Times reported that Patricia Neri has now left her job for "personal
reasons" after beginning a relationship with a man believed to be Douglas Frith,
who is president of the
Canadian
Motion Picture Distributors Association.
Neri testified recently before the Canadian Senate on the need for a new law
banning video cameras in cinemas.
"Neri's personal life is no-one's business but her own," wrote Dr Michael
Geist, Canada Research Chair of Internet and E-commerce Law at the
University
of Ottawa in his
blog.
"[But] this does raise troubling questions about the quick passage of Bill
C-59, the anti-camcording legislation, since Neri appeared as a witness before a
Senate hearing on the bill with the lobbyist in the room.
"The Privy Council Office places particular responsibility on public servants
who appear before a Parliamentary committee, since they do so on behalf of the
Minister.
"This is not an easy issue to raise, but if these reports are true it surely
creates at least a perceived conflict of interest contrary to Government Ethics
Guidelines on a file that is very controversial and likely to grab the spotlight
this fall."
Neri is now a special advisor to Assistant Deputy Minister Jean-Pierre Blais
with "duties still to be determined".
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