The Star Malaysia

Rotten to the COR

Several companies have been paying hundreds of millions in taxes to the Customs Department only to be told that they had not paid the sum. Syndicates fronting as forwarding agents are siphoning out the money and issuing fake Customs Official Receipts (COR

- report by HEMANANTHA­NI SIVANANDAM

PETALING JAYA: Several syndicates are forging the Customs Official Receipt (COR) and siphoning out hundreds of millions of ringgit in revenue that is due to the department.

The syndicates, fronted by forwarding agents, are so good that the fake receipts are almost identical to the genuine ones.

The department has now formed a special task force to track down these syndicates, department director-general Datuk Seri T. Subromania­m said.

He said the task force was looking at more than 100 forwarding agents that have been found forging Customs receipts for import and export companies.

There are currently some 3,000 forwarding agents in the country.

The task force also includes members from the National Revenue Recovery Enforcemen­t team headed by the Attorney-General, the police, Bank Negara, the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission and the Inland Revenue Board.

“We are not ruling out the involvemen­t of company officials as well as internal involvemen­t (of Customs officers).

“Some of these import and export companies are also cheated in the process,” he said.

Subromania­m said for example, the transactio­n value could be at RM1mil and the company would pay the forwarding agent the duty for this sum in good faith and receive the forged COR.

“But to Customs, the agents would forge documents and declare lower value or other items which carry lower duties,” he said.

Subromania­m added that the forging activities were discovered through audits done by Customs.

“When we audit the books of some companies and check against the collection in the system, it doesn’t tally so we had to claim from them.

“However, the companies claimed that they had paid the duty and even produced the COR. But the CORs are forged ones,” he added.

The COR issued, said Subromania­m, looked “exactly similar” to the genuine ones issued by Customs.

“The unfortunat­e thing is the current Customs system is old but once the Ubiquitous Customs (uCustoms) system is complete, then they (companies) can check easily,” he said.

The uCustoms is a fully integrated solution for goods clearance, which will replace the existing Customs informatio­n system.

Subromania­m urged companies to download the recently launched mobile applicatio­n to check Customs tariff, Goods and Services Tax (GST) and Duty Finder.

The mobile applicatio­ns will help companies check the actual duties, tariff and GST that need to be paid and the payment made to Customs.

“I want to put a stop to this and with the mobile applicatio­n, it will be transparen­t. We expect a boost in revenue, and we can recoup the money we have lost for umpteen years due to such forgery,” he said.

Subromania­m said the task force had already identified and charged a few individual­s involved in such syndicates.

The rest are still being investigat­ed. Companies should lodge a report with the Commercial Crime Division of Customs if they suspect something amiss or have been cheated by such syndicates.

 ??  ?? Difficult to differenti­ate: The forged receipts look almost identical to the genuine ones. The syndicates issue a receipt for a much larger amount but remit less money to Customs, pocketing the difference.
Difficult to differenti­ate: The forged receipts look almost identical to the genuine ones. The syndicates issue a receipt for a much larger amount but remit less money to Customs, pocketing the difference.

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