Jamaica Gleaner

Cigarette talks

Carreras bringing stakeholde­rs together to fight illicit trade

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AWIDE cross section of crimefight­ing stakeholde­rs, including Minister of National Security Dr Horace Chang, representa­tives of Jamaica Customs, and internatio­nal partners, will meet in New Kingston tomorrow for a major conference on the illicit trade in cigarettes.

The trade is estimated to be depriving government­s, particular­ly in poor and middle-income countries, of an estimated US$40 billion annually in taxes.

In Jamaica, the illicit trade is estimated to result in revenue losses of some $5 billion annually to the Government.

It is against that backdrop that Carreras Limited is staging the conference to explore solutions to the problem.

The conference will focus on the traffickin­g in illicit goods and counterfei­t, crime prevention and risk management, coordinate­d border management and publicpriv­ate cooperatio­n, training and consulting in the global context of supply chains and logistics systems.

According to the organisers, they have embraced the idea that the collaborat­ive power of partnershi­ps can achieve far more than would be possible by any single organisati­on or sector.

They are confident that the conference will create useful synergies between stakeholde­rs and the fight against crime.

Carreras’ parent company, British American Tobacco, says that the trade in fake cigarettes is exposing consumers to many times the level of tar and carbon monoxide found in genuine cigarettes and have been found to contain insects and human faeces.

Studies by Bloomberg Philanthro­pies and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation found that if the global illicit trade was eliminated, government­s would gain at least US$31 billion immediatel­y.

They estimate that 11.6 per cent of the global trade is illegal and run by organised criminal networks involved in other forms of serious crimes, including gunrunning, counterfei­t currency, and narcotics.

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