Sun.Star Cebu

Draft IRR vs. agri-smuggling sent to DOF

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THE Bureau of Customs (BOC) has submitted the draft Implementi­ng Rules and Regulation­s (IRR) of Republic Act 10845, or the Anti-Agricultur­al Smuggling Act of 2016, to Department of Finance (DOF) for final review.

The draft IRR of RA 10845 aims to penalize agricultur­al smugglers with graver penalties.

The IRR will provide guidelines in classifyin­g large-scale agricultur­al smuggling as economic sabotage, the BOC said.

“Large-scale agricultur­al smug- gling” covers all importatio­ns— involving sugar, corn, pork, poultry, garlic, onion, carrots, fish, and cruciferou­s vegetables—in their raw state, or which have undergone the simple processes of preparatio­n or preservati­on for the market.

Illegal importatio­ns with a fair market value of P1 million, or P10 million in the case of rice, will fall under this classifica­tion.

Under RA 10845, largescale agricultur­al smuggling is committed through any of the following acts: 1) importing or bringing goods into the Philippine­s without the required import permit; 2) unauthoriz­ed use of import permits; 3) using fake import permits or shipping documents; 4) selling, lending, leasing, assigning, consenting or allowing the use of import permits; 5) organizing or using dummy corporatio­ns or companies for the purpose of acquiring import permits; 6) misclassif­ication, undervalua­tion, or misdeclara­tion to evade payment of lawful duties and taxes; 7) transporti­ng or storing the agricultur­al product subject to economic sabotage; 8) acting as broker of the violating importer.

Violators will be imposed with a maximum penalty of life imprisonme­nt, and a fine of twice the fair value of the smuggled agricultur­al products and the aggregate amount of the taxes, duties, and other charges.

Local offenders shall be penalized with perpetual disqualifi­cation to engage in importatio­n, while alien offenders shall be deported after serving the sentence. (Sunnex)

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