Manila Bulletin

Palace convinced sugar shortage ‘artificial’ as boc seizes 60k bags of sugar in bulacan warehouses

- By ARGYLL CYRUS B. GEDUCOS

Malacañang pounced hard anew on suspected sugar hoarders and announced the seizure of at least 60,000 bags of sugar in a series of inspection in different warehouses in Bulacan on Saturday, August 20.

Press Secretary Trixie Cruz-Angeles said President Marcos promised to bring out more sugar stocks in the market in a bid to bring down sugar prices.

In a statement, Angeles said the relentless campaign of the government continue to bear positive results following the Bureau of Customs' (BOC) inspection of four more warehouses in Guiguinto, Bulacan.

"Armed with a Letter of Authority (LOA), Customs personnel used their visitorial power to inspect four warehouses in T12 Polo Land, Ilang-Ilang street in Barangay Tabang, Guiguinto, Bulacan late Saturday afternoon," she said.

Authoritie­s found imported sugar from Thailand at 50 kilograms per sack. One of the four warehouses had sacks of sugar neatly stacked up to the roof.

The warehouse caretaker told Customs inspectors the Thai sugar had just been delivered from the Manila Internatio­nal Container Terminal (MICT) Friday evening.

Authoritie­s also learned that the permit used to import Thailand sugar was the allocation under Sugar Order No. 3 issued on February by the Sugar Regulatory Board.

Customs officials are now verifying the authentici­ty of the importatio­n documents presented by the warehouse caretaker in Guiguinto, Bulacan.

The massive volume of sugar discovered by authoritie­s in various warehouses in Luzon led Malacañang to conclude that the sugar shortage was artificial, brought about by the hoarding of sugar traders who wanted to rake in huge profits from the sudden spike in sugar prices.

Before the inspection in Bulacan, the Subic Port customs had also seized 140,000 bags of imported sugar from Thailand, equivalent to 7,000 metric tons. The Customs Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ion Service (CIIS) suspected a "recycled permit" was used in the Subic Port.

On orders of the President, the Office of the Executive Secretary had earlier directed the Sugar Regulatory Administra­tion (SRA) to account for the 63,000 metric tons of sugar from the 200,000 MT importatio­n authorized under Sugar Order No. 3.

Angeles said the BOC and other agencies are continuous­ly inspecting sugar warehouses per Marcos' intensifie­d campaign against the illegal importatio­n of agricultur­al products.

In a span of two days, the BoC, SRA and the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) inspected sugar warehouses in Deparo, Caloocan City; Balut in Tondo and San Nicolas in Manila; Rosales, Pangasinan; San Fernando, Pampanga; Ibaan, Batangas, and Davao.

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