Warehouse raids yield ‘suspected hoarded sugar’ | Inquirer

Customs crackdown in Pampanga, Bulacan

Warehouse raids yield ‘suspected hoarded sugar’

By: - Reporter /
/ 05:38 AM August 19, 2022

The photos shows the facade of the Bureau of Customs which launched the National Customs Intelligence System

Photo from the Bureau of Customs

The government has started clamping down on sugar hoarding amid consumer complaints of soaring prices in the local market due to a supply shortage.

The Bureau of Customs (BOC) on Thursday raided a warehouse in San Fernando, Pampanga province, and another in Bulacan province on suspicion that they were housing hoarded sugar.

Article continues after this advertisement

According to the Office of the Press Secretary (OPS), agents of the BOC Intelligence and Investigation Service based in Clark Freeport swooped down on Lison Building and seized thousands of “suspected hoarded sacks of imported sugar from Thailand.”

FEATURED STORIES

The BOC also confiscated hundreds of sacks of sugar loaded into delivery vans.

The OPS said the initial report reaching the BOC showed that the sacks of sugar found at the warehouse “appeared old and dusty, evidence of its prolonged storage/hoarding (presumably) to dictate the market prices.”

Article continues after this advertisement

It said the customs agents also raided a warehouse owned by Victor Chua in San Jose del Monte, Bulacan, late Wednesday, where they found 25,000 to 30,000 sacks of sugar, which the owner claimed were “locally purchased.”

Article continues after this advertisement

The BOC and the Department of Agriculture on Thursday afternoon went to check another warehouse owned by Chua also in San Jose del Monte.

Article continues after this advertisement

Warning

The warehouse, which has a floor area of around 2,000 to 3,000 square meters, was storing at least 42,733 sacks of sugar or roughly equivalent to 2,150 metric tons worth P215 million, the OPS noted.

The raid, the OPS said, was based on a tip that the warehouse owned by Chua had been storing hoarded sugar to rake in “huge profits from the current high sugar prices in the market.”

Article continues after this advertisement

The BOC operations were ordered by Executive Secretary Victor Rodriguez, upon the directive of President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. for the bureau “to exercise its visitorial powers to all customs bonded warehouse and to check on the inventory of imported agricultural products” to check for sugar hoarding.

“This is a series of raids. We can confirm that there is another one today and possibly more in the coming days,” Press Secretary Trixie Cruz Angeles said in a Palace briefing on Thursday.

“The BOC’s Pampanga sugar warehouse raid may very well serve as a warning to unscrupulous traders who are currently hoarding their stocks of sugar in order to profit from the current artificial sugar shortage situation,” Rodriguez was quoted as saying in the OPS statement.

‘Windfall profits’

Based on reports reaching the Office of the Executive Secretary, such massive importation of sugar could “result in windfall profits for the traders” of at least P300 million, with a portion of the amount earmarked as lobby money, the statement added.

The BOC gave the warehouse owners 15 days to present the necessary documents to prove that the items were legally imported into the country.

“If proven that the Thailand sugar were smuggled, the warehouse owners may face charges of smuggling in relation to the provisions of The Customs Modernization [and Tariff] Act,” the OPS said. —WITH A REPORT FROM JUN A. MALIG

RELATED STORIES

Palace, industry stakeholders agree on proposed 150,000 MT sugar import

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the and acknowledge that I have read the .

Sugar crisis may trigger price hikes of processed food, beverages

TAGS: BOC, raid, sugar

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

By providing an email address. I agree to the and acknowledge that I have read the .

© Copyright 1997-2024 | All Rights Reserved

This is an information message

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing, you agree to our use of cookies.