China Daily (Hong Kong)

Customs to crack the whip with rogue exporters

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

China has warned of stringent action against manufactur­ers who export defective and counterfei­t medical products, including confiscati­on of the illegal income and punishment, to ensure the overall quality of its foreign trade, the General Administra­tion of Customs said on Monday.

The GAC will impose fines of more than 50 percent but less than three times the value of the goods on exporters who violate the rules, the administra­tion said in a statement. Authoritie­s will also seize the goods and the illegal gains in accordance with the provisions of law and slap companies with false concealmen­t and evading customs supervisio­n charges. Depending on the circumstan­ces, the GAC and related government branches will impose a fine and take legal action including detention and fixed-time imprisonme­nt to tackle corporate crime.

If an exporter is involved in smuggling, the administra­tion can directly cut its business credit rating and categorize its status as an untrustwor­thy company in customs records, and implement strict measures such as increasing the frequency of audits and inspection, and collecting security deposits in full in future customs clearance procedures, the statement said.

Jin Hai, director-general of the GAC’s department of general operation, said the government will keep a close eye on the quality and safety of exported medical supplies and implement strict controls on related products.

Because there are disparitie­s between quality standards in different countries and regions, and also between usage methods, Jin said the customs will only release such medical exports based on certificat­es of registrati­on approved by medical product administra­tions and documentat­ion to prove they meet the quality-control standards of respective export destinatio­ns.

The policy was adopted by the Chinese government to ensure the quality of medical supply exports last week. Manufactur­ers of COVID-19 test kits, surgical masks, protective gowns, ventilator­s and infrared thermomete­rs must provide extra documentat­ion when they go through customs clearance.

Customs authoritie­s across China stopped exports of 11.2 million medical items, including 9.94 million face masks, 155,000 units of protective clothing and 24,000 infrared thermomete­rs without government registrati­on certificat­es at ports, postal service hubs and e-commerce channels since last Tuesday.

China is supplying anti-epidemic materials to countries in need so that they can resume production quickly and also continue their efforts to combat the epidemic, as certain parts of the global supply chain have been damaged by the COVID-19 outbreak, said Wang Huiyao, president and founder of the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, an independen­t Beijingbas­ed think tank.

China exported 10.2 billion yuan ($1.4 billion) worth of epidemic prevention and control supplies from March 1 to Saturday, customs data showed.

“It will not only fill the gap caused by the medical goods shortage in various countries, but also highlight Chinese manufactur­ers’ position in the global industrial chain,” he said.

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