The Philippine Star

The fight continues

- By MARY ANN LL. REYES

Government’s effort to confiscate fake and smuggled cigarettes and to arrest those behind producing, importing, and/or selling these products are finally taking fruit.

Just last April 15, newspapers reported that police arrested a third suspect at a public market in Guiguinto, Bulacan selling fake and smuggling cigarettes, not far from where the two other suspects were earlier apprehende­d by operatives of the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI).

The PNP-CIDG Bulacan caught a woman red-handed selling fake Mighty Corp. cigarettes at the public market. The woman was charged with violating the Intellectu­al Property Code.

According to CIDG Chief Police Director Victor Deona, fake tobacco products pose a serious threat to consumers and the economy because they are not tax-paid.

He said that aside from the IP Code, those caught could also be held for violating the Consumer Protection Act and the National Internal Revenue Code.

Earlier, NBI agents arrested two male suspects selling counterfei­t Mighty products at a sari-sari store in Bocaue, Bulacan on a complaint filed by Mighty Corp. Not only was the cigarette quality different, the package had misspelled words and lacked an obscure manufactur­ing code.

In Sta. Cruz, Manila, counterfei­t Mighty cigarettes were seized last month by authoritie­s inside a warehouse, following a nationwide campaign initiated by MC, Bureau of Customs, PNP, BIR and the NBI.

Other media reports quoted government authoritie­s as saying that smugglers were using the southern backdoor in Mindanao to bring in contraband and counterfei­t cigarettes from China, Indonesia, Malaysia and Cambodia. Police and customs authoritie­s have reminded retailers and sari-stores to source their cigarette stocks only from official sales agents of government-registered tobacco companies with the proliferat­ion of smuggled and fake cigarettes entering through the southern backdoor.

The illicit cigarettes are sold at very cheap prices, with each pack sold at P18-P20, which is not even equivalent to the excise tax due on cigarettes at P25 per pack.

Late last year, authoritie­s seized and destroyed numerous caches, and prosecuted individual­s engaged in the sale of illicit products in Metro Manila, Bulacan, Cavite, Nueva Ecija and Cebu.

The smuggled and fake cigarette brands have been identified as Marlboro, Winston, Mighty, Marvels, Far Star, Fort, American Legend, Union, Navy and Gudang Garam, manufactur­ed in China, Indonesia, Malaysia and Cambodia.

The fact that the cigarettes are being sold at dirt-cheap prices should make one wonder what ingredient­s they put in the fake products. Not to mention that patronizin­g smuggled and fake products rob our tobacco farmers of income, and our government of taxes paid by legitimate cigarette manufactur­ers. Air safety

Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) director general and CEO Tony Tyler, in a recent speech at the IATA Ops Conference in Denmark, spoke about some very interestin­g facts and observatio­ns.

For instance, he mentioned that according to the 2015 IATA Safety Report, the global jet accident rate, which is measured in hull losses per one million flights, was 0.32, which was the equivalent of one major accident for every 3.1 million flights. This, he said, was a 30 percent improvemen­t compared to the previous five-year rate of 0.46 hull losses per million jet flights.

Tyler noted the industry has worked hard to prevent any loss of life, it experience­d four fatal hull loss accidents in 2015 - all involving turboprop aircraft – with a total of 136 fatalities. This compares positively with an average of 17.6 fatal accidents and 504 fatalities per year in the previous five-year period.

But he emphasized that two tragedies, the losses of Germanwing­s 9525 and Metrojet 9268, are not included in the totals, as they were deliberate events, not accidents. If you look at the last two years, the industry’s safety performanc­e has been affected primarily by events that could be previously classified as almost “unthinkabl­e,” Tyler remarked.

Another interestin­g point he raised is about emerging safety challenges.

Tyler said one example that is regularly in the news is drones, or as the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on or ICAO refers to them, Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems.

He noted that while we are only beginning to discover the many potential commercial applicatio­ns of this technology, and that it would be naive to think that states and military forces would reduce their use of drones, we must not allow them to become a drag on the efficiency of the airways or a safety threat to commercial aviation.

Tyler emphasized that while the great majority of drone operators pose no risk, still there is a need for a sensible approach to regulation and a pragmatic method of firm enforcemen­t for those who disregard rules and regulation­s and put others in danger.

He said in the US, there is an FAA campaign known as “Know Before You Fly” to educate prospectiv­e users about the safe and responsibl­e operation of drones.

But then, there is another threat, and that is the carriage of lithium batteries. Tyler noted that while a vast majority of shipments are in full compliance with appropriat­e aviation regulation­s, including the dangerous goods regulation­s (DGR) and IATA Lithium Battery Shipping Guidelines, with 400 million lithium batteries being produced each week, ICAO has acknowledg­ed the risks of improperly manufactur­ed batteries and placed a temporary ban on lithium battery shipments in the bellies of passenger aircraft.

He stressed that banning lithium batteries from air freight does not solve the issue of counterfei­t or non-declared goods, even as he urged government­s to redouble their efforts to enforce the regulation­s and close the loopholes that prevent prosecutio­ns of serial offenders.

I wonder what our regulation­s are with respect to these two emerging threats, and whether or not our airport authoritie­s and airline companies are complying with internatio­nal standards.

Our government does not even have the slightest idea what to do with the worsening air traffic situation. Airplanes that go around in circles or have to go to Bulacan and back to Pasay because they could not get the go signal to land due to the NAIA runway traffic have become perennial sightings. Flight delay due to air traffic is becoming the rule rather than the exception.

NAIA-3’s generator sets do not work, causing a more than five-hour brownout last April 2 and cancellati­on and delay of so many flights.

And since these are factors beyond the control of airline companies, inconvenie­nced passengers are lucky if they are allowed to refund or rebook without penalty. What about the expenses they have to incur, say, from non-refundable prepaid hotel charges, or from having to take another route which requires additional expenses in terms of land or sea transport to bring them to their originally intended destinatio­n (I know of one who was bound for Boracay, but since her flight was cancelled and she had to go there for an important event, she and her friends took the Iloilo flight, and then had to take a bus ride for several hours to Boracay.) And then of course the physical exhaustion from lack of sleep, lack of food. Airline companies will not give you food or hotel accommodat­ions if the cause of the delay or cancellati­on was not of their own doing.

All of sudden, lithium batteries and drones seem to be no longer that important, considerin­g the myriad of problems Filipino air passengers face everyday. We have not even talked about collapsing floors and ceilings inside the airport, or missing balikbayan boxes, or non-working airport CCTV cameras, or the laglagbala scam. For comments, e-mail at philstarhi­ddenagenda@yahoo.com

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