Cebu Customs intercepts P4.5M of misdeclared ‘ukay-ukay’

These are the bales of ukay ukay worth P4.5 million intercepted by the Cebu Customs.

Customs officials in Cebu on Thursday, September 10, 2020, intercept a cargo containing P4.5 million worth of misdeclared ‘ukay-ukay’ clothes shipped from China. | Photos courtesy of Bureau of Customs – Cebu Port via Morexette Marie Erram #CDNDigital

CEBU CITY, Philippines – Customs officials in Cebu on Thursday, September 10, intercepted a cargo containing misdeclared used clothes, commonly referred to as ‘ukay-ukay’.

The Bureau of Customs in Cebu (BOC – Cebu), in an official statement, said the misdeclared goods worth P4.5 million were shipped from China.

They were to be sold as ‘ukay-ukay’ here in the country, and were discovered in a container van declared to have hotel supplies, BOC-Cebu said.

“The shipment arrived at the Port from China on 20 August 2020 and was declared in the Inward Foreign Manifest to contain hotel supplies,” the bureau said.

BOC-Cebu also said the shipment was consigned to an importer that was involved in previous incidents of smuggling, particularly cigarettes.

READ MORE: Cebu Customs intercepts P54.6M of smuggled cigarettes

“With the successive seizures of previous shipments from the same importer, the container was subjected to X-ray inspection which showed suspicious X-ray images. On 28 August 2020, Acting District Collector, Lawyer Charlito Martin R. Mendoza, issued a Pre-Lodgment Control Order (PLCO) against the shipment,” said BOC-Cebu.

They said that their team tasked to chase after smugglers had already filed criminal charges against the importer before the Department of Justice (DOJ).

“In a related development, the Bureau’s Action Team Against Smugglers (BATAS) has instituted criminal charges against (the importer) before the Department of Justice for the unlawful importation of various brands of cigarettes estimated to have a total street value of Php234.7 Million,” said BOC-Cebu.

“The Bureau’s Account Management Office (AMO) has also revoked the importer’s accreditation,” they added. /dbs

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