The Philippine Star

SEIZED SUGAR:

- By EDU PUNAY

A Customs worker opens shipping containers loaded with sacks of sugar from Thailand, which were misdeclare­d as furniture at the Port of Manila yesterday.

The Bureau of Customs (BOC) yesterday seized a shipment of imported sugar worth P39.37 million at the Port of Manila (POM).

The shipment, transporte­d in 45 20-foot shipping containers and misdeclare­d as packaging materials, kitchen utensils and kraft paper, was confiscate­d after it was abandoned by the importer.

It was seized after POM District Collector Erastus Sandino Austria issued a Decree of Abandonmen­t against the shipment over failure of the local importer to file the entry within the prescribed period.

The containers, which arrived on separate dates in June and July, were shipped from Thailand by Hup Lee Trading and consigned to Red Star Rising Corp. in Binondo, Manila.

Records from the Account Management Office showed the company is owned by a certain Dante Lunar.

During inspection of the containers as part of the standard operating procedure, Customs examiners found 22,500 sacks of sugar in the 45 containers instead of the declared items.

Officials said the shipment violated Section 117 (regulated importatio­n and exportatio­n), Section 1400 (misdeclara­tion, misclassif­ication, undervalua­tion in goods declaratio­n) of the Customs Modernizat­ion and Tariff Act in relation to SRABOC Joint Memorandum Circular No. 4-2002.

SRA-BOC Joint Memorandum Circular No. 4-2002 provides that no imported sugar shall be released to the importer/ consignee without clearance from the Sugar Regulatory Administra­tion (SRA).

The BOC said Red Star also violated Republic Act 10845 or the Anti-Agricultur­al Smuggling Act of 2016.

Section 3 of Republic Act No. 10845 considers the smuggling of sugar in excess of P1 million as economic sabotage.

The importer’s accreditat­ion, which was approved in September last year, was immediatel­y revoked upon orders of the Customs chief.

“Our intensifie­d border protection, timely issuance of alert orders on shipments with derogatory informatio­n, regular spot inspection and the strict measures in customs clearance may have caused the abandonmen­t of this misdeclare­d sugar in fear of being caught,” Customs commission­er Isidro Lapeña said.

Lapeña has ordered all ports to heighten border protection against all forms of smuggling as unscrupulo­us individual­s are getting bolder in importing smuggled and contraband goods.

 ?? MIGUEL DE GUZMAN ??
MIGUEL DE GUZMAN

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