Manila Bulletin

Customs donates seized goods to typhoon victims

- By BETHEENA KAE UNITE

Various forfeited goods, including rice, were donated anew by the Bureau of Customs to those affected by typhoon “Ompong.” Customs Commission­er Isidro Lapeña said the bureau’s Enforcemen­t and Security Service (ESS) donated 374 sacks of rice and 5,040 canned goods, which were previously seized and were already subjected to forfeiture proceeding­s.

“To help our kababayan who were affected by the recent calamity that devastated several areas in Northern Luzon, the Bureau of Customs decided to provide our fellow-Filipinos with humanitari­an aid through the DSWD (Department of Social welfare and Developmen­t),” Lapeña said during the turnover of the goods to the DSWD .

Last week, the Manila Internatio­nal Container Port (MICP) also extended their help by giving 109 packages of emergency survival blankets, 153 packages of face masks, 350 boxes of bedsheets, blankets, and towels, and 1,332 boxes of brand-new clothes.

The bureau’s Disaster Relief Team, headed by Deputy Commission­er Edward James DyBuco, in coordinati­on with the Auction and Cargo Disposal Division (ACDD) of the MICP, identified said goods eligible for donation and were considered viable for donation by the DSWD.

Lapeña said the donated goods were declared abandoned for lack of interest on the part of the consignee and were deemed property of the government on January 14 and 15, 2018.

Likewise, the Port of Cebu donated 14 containers of rice which were forfeited in favor of the government. The Port of Zamboanga donated 6,921 bags of glutinous rice to DSWD for distributi­on to Ompong victims.

Under Section 1141 of the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act, “goods subject to dispositio­n may be donated to another government agency or declared for official use of the Bureau, after approval of the Secretary of Finance, or sold at a public auction within thirty (30) days after a ten (10)-day notice posted at a public place at the port where the goods are located and published electronic­ally or in a newspaper of general circulatio­n.

The series of donations were made after Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III asked the bureau to release seized and forfeited rice and goods and distribute them to typhoon victims.

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