Philippine Daily Inquirer

BOC ORDERS PORTS TO EXAMINE, SEIZE, DISPOSE OF OVERSTAYIN­G CARGOES

- —BEN O. DE VERA

The Bureau of Customs (BOC) has ordered the country’s 17 ports to inspect all abandoned shipments and dispose of them accordingl­y to avoid port congestion.

In a memorandum issued by Customs Commission­er Rey Leonardo B. Guerrero last Aug. 12, all district and subport collectors were directed “to examine all overstayin­g shipments within their respective collection districts.”

Guerrero said this move would help the BOC control and supervise better all import and export cargoes in order to collect correct import duties and other taxes from shipments passing through air and sea ports. This would also prevent the entry of contraband and smuggled items and suppress customs fraud.

In the case of overstayin­g imported shipments “found to be in order” or without issues, Guerrero said ports should issue decrees of abandonmen­t for the goods.

In case agents found the shipments to have violated the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act and other related laws, “a warrant of seizure and detention should be issued,” Guerrero said.

The warrant would cover prohibited, regulated and restricted goods, and shipments lacking in mandatory clearances and other required documents, Guerrero added.

Latest BOC data released on Saturday showed that as of Aug. 14, yard utilizatio­n, or the occupancy rate of cargoes inside ports, at Port of Manila was 68 percent; 65.8 percent at Manila Internatio­nal Container Port; 8.8 percent at Davao’s Sasa Wharf; 82.2 percent at Davao Internatio­nal Container Terminal; 38.9 percent in Batangas; and 30 percent in Subic. As of Aug. 13, Cebu’s yard utilizatio­n was at 56 percent.

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