THE Bureau of Customs (BOC) last week apprehended four container vans at the Manila International Container Port containing appliances and other accessories misdeclared as hardware materials. The shipments are estimated to be worth P40 million.

Import documents declared one twenty-footer container van containing 170 packages of hardware materials while the other three forty-footer container vans were declared to contain 6,875 hardware tools. The shipment was consigned to X-mart Corp.

Following an alert order issued by Deputy Customs Commissioner Horacio Suansing, the shipments underwent full examination.

“Misdeclaration is outright smuggling,” said Suansing, who automatically recommended immediate seizure of the goods. “These are brand-new home and commercial appliances and they will be recommended to be auctioned off.”

Customs Commissioner Napoleon Morales has ordered an investigation for possible filing of criminal charges against the consignee and an internal probe to determine if customs personnel were involved in the smuggling attempt.

Morales said vigilance against smuggling contributed to the bureau’s surpassing its five-month target by over P6 billion.

Partial figures for June show the customs bureau is on track to surpass its mid-year target of P124.056 billion.

You May Also Like

Slump in Davao shipping projected

DAVAO CITY, SOUTHERN PHILIPPINES — Shipping stakeholders in this region are bracing for a tough 2013 due mainly to the devastation caused by typhoon…

Aggrieved PH threatens retaliatory tariffs on Thai car imports

The Philippines is considering imposing tariffs on auto imports from Thailand in retaliation for the neighboring country’s non-compliance with a World Trade Organization (WTO)…

CCBI chief eyes electronic database, national ID for brokers

The Chamber of Customs Brokers, Inc. (CCBI), the professional organization of customs brokers in the country recognized by the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC), plans…

18 luxury cars intercepted at Manila port

Eighteen luxury cars worth more than P107 million were seized by the Bureau of Customs (BOC) due to undervaluation and incomplete documents. The shipments…