The Pak Banker

Philip Morris urges Thailand to drop prosecutio­n after WTO's 2nd ruling

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BANGKOK: Philip Morris urged Thailand to drop criminal charges against its Thai subsidiary, after a second World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) ruling that the Asian nation had failed to comply with regulation­s on cigarette imports.

Thai public prosecutor filed criminal charges in 2017 against Philip Morris Thailand for under-declaratio­n of more than 780 entries of cigarettes that cleared Thai customs between 2002 and 2003. In a second ruling since 2018, the WTO said that Thailand had not met obligation­s under the Customs Valuation Agreement, regarding the valuation of cigarettes imported by Philip Morris Thailand from Philip Morris subsidiari­es in the Philippine­s and Indonesia.

"The ruling requires the immediate withdrawal of the prosecutio­n against (Philip Morris Thailand) and our employees," Gerald Margolis, branch manager of Philip Morris Thailand, said in a statement emailed to Reuters.

"We trust that the government will promptly honour its obligation to withdraw the criminal prosecutio­n," he said.

Representa­tives of the Thai government were not immediatel­y available for comment.

The Philippine­s went to the WTO in 2008 to complain that Thailand was illegally discrimina­ting against imports to protect its state-controlled Thailand Tobacco Monopoly.

"This WTO dispute has been going on for more than 10 years now … and it is about time that Thailand accepts the rulings and implements the customs valuation reforms called for by those rulings," Philippine­s Trade and Industry Secretary Ramon Lopez said in a statement.

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