The Philippine Star

DOJ backs bills declaring agri smuggling as economic sabotage

- By EVELYN MACAIRAN

Large- scale smuggling is a form of economic sabotage, the Department of Justice (DOJ) said yesterday.

In a two-page legal opinion, DOJ Assistant Secretary Adonis Sulit informed Mildred Yovela Umali- Hermogenes, deputy executive secretary of the Offi of the President-Legal Affairs, that the agency supports the consolidat­ed bills that declare large-scale agricultur­e smuggling as economic sabotage.

Hermogenes earlier asked the DOJ to comment on the consolidat­ed enrolled bills, Senate Bill 2923 and House Bill 6380, or an act declaring large- scale agricultur­al smuggling as economic sabotage.

Sulit assured Hermogenes that the DOJ supports the proposed measure meant to curb, if not to eradicate, smuggling as a self-preservati­on measure of the state.

He said the proposed measure conforms with Section 1 of Article XII of the 1987 Constituti­on, which provides that the state should protect Filipino enterprise­s against foreign competitio­n and trade practices.

The DOJ official described smuggling activities as a “double-edged sword.”

“While the smugglers bring down the prices of commoditie­s that would somehow benefit the customers, the price fixed at its lowest level would eventually ease the local producers from the free market,” Sulit said.

He said smuggling deprives the government of the right to collect the correct revenue.

“Smugglers create an unfavorabl­e condition for the local producers who are economic participan­ts in a playing field that is disadvanta­geous to them,” the DOJ said.

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