Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC stops TRO on rice shipment from Davao

- By Christineo. Avendaño

AS JUSTICE Secretary Leila de Lima pushed for a Cabinet-crafted policy on rice importatio­n, the Bureau of Customs (BOC) has won a temporary victory over one of four court injunction­s it is facing in connection with the entry into the country of rice shipments without import permits.

The Supreme Court yesterday stopped a Davao City Regional Trial Court order that restrained the BOC from seizing 91,800 bags of imported rice that a businessma­n had bought from a firm linked to David Bangayan aka David Tan. The shipment arrived two months ago without an import permit.

The high court issued a temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) to stop the enforcemen­t of the Dec. 12, 2013, order of Judge Emmanuel Carpio of Davao City RTC Branch 16 that prevented the BOC from seizing the shipment of Joseph Ngo.

Ngo bought the rice from Starcraft Internatio­nal Trading Corp., which is linked to Bangayan, who is suspected to be rice smuggler David Tan.

“The TRO is effective immediatel­y and until further orders

from the court,” said Supreme Court spokespers­on Theodore Te.

The high court acted on the petition for certiorari with applicatio­n for a TRO, status quo order and/or preliminar­y injunction filed on Feb. 21 by Customs Commission­er John Phillip Sevilla and Agricultur­e Secretary Proceso Alcala as chair of the National Food Authority (NFA).

The petitioner­s told the high court that the injunction against the implementa­tion of NFA Memorandum Circular No. AO-2K13-03-003, which requires rice imports to be covered by duly issued import permits, had “brought about the unbridled entry of smuggled rice from various countries to the detriment of the Filipino farmers.”

Protecting farmers

“Consequent­ly, petitioner­s invoke the power of the honorable court to intervene, enjoin and strike down the baseless issuances of respondent judge which defeat the earnest efforts of the national government, particular­ly the NFA and the BOC, to curb the unlawful smuggling of rice into Philippine shores and protecting the local agricultur­e sector, especially the small farmers in the rural areas,” Sevilla and Alcala told the high court.

At a briefing, Te said the high court granted the TRO after it considered “meritoriou­s the Office of the Solicitor General’s arguments regarding the lack of adequate representa­tion of the BOC during the Regional Trial Court hearings and the lack of legal standing of Ngo to sue.”

The Supreme Court spokespers­on also said the high court required Judge Carpio and Ngo to comment on the petition against them within 10 days from receipt of its notice.

Complaint against judge

Carpio himself is a subject of an administra­tive complaint in the high court for issuing the order that prevented the BOC from seizing Ngo’s shipment.

The Samahang Industriya ng Agrikultur­a Inc. (Sinag) filed the complaint early thismonth. Sinag is an umbrella organizati­on of 33 federation­s and various sectors of the agricultur­al industry.

The group sued Carpio for alleged gross misconduct and knowingly rendering an unjust judgment.

Rice importers have resorted to going to court and seeking injunction­s against the BOC for holding their rice shipments.

Ngo, for instance, had told the Davao City Regional Trial Court that requiring an import permit on the importatio­n of rice may no longer be imposed because the special treatment for rice importatio­n under the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) had expired in June 2012.

The country is currently seeking an extension with the WTO.

De Lima, meanwhile, said she hoped the Cabinet would have discussion­s on the country’s rice importatio­n policy following court injunction­s preventing the BOC from implementi­ng its no-rice import permit, no-entry policy.

Quantitati­ve restrictio­ns

The justice secretary said the existing policy was for the continued imposition of quantitati­ve restrictio­ns on the entry of rice imports into the country.

De Lima told reporters the rice policy was not purely a legal issue.

“It has to be a policy at a macro level. It cannot just be a purely NFA/DA matter,” she said.

She said rice importatio­n had economic implicatio­ns beyond agricultur­e. “Wewant a clear policy guidance.”

Massive smuggling

Some 2,000 container vans with 50,000 metric tons of rice were smuggled into the country weekly in 2013 (or 2.6 metric million tons annually), Deputy Customs Commission­er Agaton Uvero told the Senate ways and means committee last month.

Uvero said the massive rice smuggling was reportedly stopped last October, with the new leadership at the bureau.

Besides rice, other products are smuggled into the country.

From 2002 to 2011, the government lost more than P1.33 trillion in revenue due to smuggling through the country’s ports, according to the Federation of Philippine Industries.

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