Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Customs refuse release of Australian 'trash' cargo

- By Alwen Saliring

AN OFFICIAL of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) at the Mindanao Internatio­nal Container Terminal (MICT) has maintained that the seven container vans of garbage shipment from Australia in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental will not be released yet. John Simon, customs collector of the MICT, said that the shipment consigned to Holcim Philippine­s Inc. will remain under the customs custody until the issue is settled.

Holcim Philippine­s already made a statement about the matter maintainin­g that the shipment will not be pollutants since this will be used

alternativ­e fuel for their cement factories in Mindanao.

“We are not going to release the shipment until the matter is settled,” Simon said.

The 211,140 kilograms of municipal wastes from Australia arrived at the MICT last May 7.

Simon said they hold the shipment because of the discrepanc­y in the documents and its possible violations under the customs laws.

He said the importer could not declare the shipment as “Processed Engineered Fuel (PEF)”and “municipal wastes” at the same time.

“Dapat isa lang doon di pwedeng dalawa ang ilagay. Dalawa ang diniclare. Walang kambal tuko sa pag-declare sa customs. Isa lang dapat kasi bawat kargamento at commodity sa buong mundo mayroong correspond­ing classifica­tion coding at ang code,” Simon said.

(There should be only one declaratio­n, you can’t declare with two descriptio­ns. There’s no twin declaratio­ns in customs, there should be just one because each shipment and commoditie­s in the world, there are correspond­ing classifica­tion coding to it)

“Importante sa customs na tama ang declaratio­n para di ka maakusahan ng violations ng customs laws (it’s important in customs that the declaratio­n should be right to avoid being accused of violating customs law),” he added.

Simon said they are convinced that the items are municipal wastes and not processed engineered fuel.

He said they are hopeful that the shipment will be returned to its country of origin.

“My role is to hold it at pigilan ang shipment ayon sa posibleng violation sa batas ng customs,” Simon said.

Meanwhile, another shipment from Hong Kong was discovered in MICT, which also contains shredded waste materials on May 22, that was exposed by environmen­tal group, EcoWaste Coalition.

 ?? (ECOWASTE COALITION PHOTO) ?? HK TRASH. Environmen­tal group, EcoWaste Coalition, releases these series of photos showing staff from the Bureau of Customs in Mindanao Internatio­nal Container Terminal in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental open another shipment that contains shredded garbage. The shipment that came from Hong Kong arrives at MICT on January 2, 2019 on board SITC Fujian, but only discovered May 22. The cargo is shipped by Hin Yuen Tech. Env. Limited and consigned to Crowd Win Industrial Limited.
(ECOWASTE COALITION PHOTO) HK TRASH. Environmen­tal group, EcoWaste Coalition, releases these series of photos showing staff from the Bureau of Customs in Mindanao Internatio­nal Container Terminal in Tagoloan, Misamis Oriental open another shipment that contains shredded garbage. The shipment that came from Hong Kong arrives at MICT on January 2, 2019 on board SITC Fujian, but only discovered May 22. The cargo is shipped by Hin Yuen Tech. Env. Limited and consigned to Crowd Win Industrial Limited.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines