Manila Bulletin

₱1-B illegal cigarette-making machines, counterfei­t tobacco products destroyed

- By CHINO S. LEYCO

The government destroyed 11-billion worth of illegal cigarette-making machines and counterfei­t tobacco products seized in various raids conducted in Visayas and Mindanao, the Department of Finance (DOF) said Wednesday.

In a statement, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said the more than 11 billion worth of manufactur­ing machines and fake cigarettes were destroyed by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) in a waste disposal facility in

Cagayan de Oro.

The BIR had earlier uncovered illicit manufactur­ing operations in Cagayan de Oro City in Misamis Oriental and in the cities of Tacloban and Ormoc in Leyte that led to the seizure of the illegal cigarette-making machines, counterfei­t cigarettes, raw materials, and packaging supplies used for cigarette manufactur­ing.

BIR Deputy Commission­er Arnel Guballa reported to Dominguez that the destructio­n activity was led by the bureau’s operations group and its strike team. It was witnessed by representa­tives from the Commission on Audit, National Bureau of Investigat­ion, local government units, local press and revenue regional offices.

In an earlier report to Dominguez, the BIR said the illegal tobacco trade has shifted from smuggling cigarettes to producing locally counterfei­t brands using undocument­ed cigarette-making machines acquired mostly from China.

During President Duterte’s fifth official visit to China, an intergover­nmental implementa­tion agreement was signed by Customs Commission­er Rey Leonardo Guerrero and Minister Ni Yuefeng of the General Administra­tion of Customs of China (GACC).

The agreement between Manila and Beijing sets the scope and guidelines in strengthen­ing the cooperatio­n and mutual assistance on Customs matters between the two countries.

Dominguez said the agreement covers GACC’s commitment to assist the BOC in monitoring and stopping the entry into the Philippine­s of unauthoriz­ed cigarette-making machines originatin­g from China.

The Finance chief directed Customs and the BIR earlier this year to work with their respective counterpar­ts in China to stop the illicit entry of cigarette-making machines that are being used to manufactur­e counterfei­t tobacco products in the country.

Guerrero and Chinese Commerce Minister Zhong Shan also signed a separate agreement on Beijing's donation of four mobile X-ray container vehicle inspection systems and two luggage inspection systems to the Philippine­s during the President’s visit to China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines