P-Noy urged: Spare ‘ukay-ukay’; BOC to burn P22 million goods
>> Thursday, September 18, 2014
By Erwin
Beleo and Eileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY -- The city government here urged
President Aquino to allow the “ukay-ukay” activity (sale of used clothes,
clothes or items) to continue in this city following crackdown conducted by the
Bureau of Customs recently.
Councilor Leandro Yangot, in a resolution,
said the city’s “ukay-ukay” or “wag-wag” business be given consideration
because like any business activities operating here, the “ukay-ukay” traders
also get business permits, and pay local taxes and fees.
More than 2,800 bales
of smuggled goods worth P22 million intended for sale in used-clothes shops or
“ukay-ukay” arrived in San Fernando City Monday from Baguio with Bureau of
Customs officials saying these would be burned since these could contain
infectious diseases.
The confiscated goods,
mostly second hand clothes, comforters and other garments, were brought to the
BOC office at Poro Point after these were seized in a series of raids conducted
first week of September by BOC agents.
A personnel at the La
Union District Collector’s office said the seized bales, which packed the BOC
offices to the ceiling, will most likely be “burned for fear of diseases.”
This developed even as
Baguio City Rep. Nicasio Aliping Jr. questioned why the BOC conducted the raids
on the alleged ukay-ukay warehouses when these goods had already passed BOC
scrutiny.
“Those items already
went through the BOC, so why still the crackdown?” he asked.
Baguio City Mayor
Mauricio Domogan, likewise, took a swipe at the BOC for zeroing in on the
businessmen engaged in “ukay-ukay” instead of clamping down on the smugglers at
the country’s ports-of-entry.
“It is unfair to our
businessmen because they are not the importers but only the retailers. Why
can’t (the BOC) run after the smugglers?” Domogan said.
He said that Baguio,
considered the country’s “ukayukay capital,” could reel from the effects of the
crackdown.
BOC agents went on a
lightning raid through nine warehouses in Baguio and Trinidad Benguet on Sept 2
and confiscated at least 2,800 bales of used clothes, mostly branded apparel
from the United States and Canada.
The agency said the
seized goods, meant for sale at the city’s hundreds of ukay-ukay stalls, were
declared as scrap fabric intended for manufacture and subsequent export as
rags.
The massive crackdown
is expected to affect the city’s ukay-ukay industry as there are 2,500
registered stalls while there are 500 ambulant vendors who ply used clothing
and other goods at the Baguio night market.
“We need to ensure
that legitimate stakeholders in the local garments industry should be protected
and illegal importations of clothing,” said Bonifacio de Castro, BOC District
Collector.
Garcia noted that the
proliferation of entrepreneurs selling used clothes has adversely affected the
local garments and clothing industry, eating into the profitability and
competitiveness of many retailers and manufacturers.
Even with this, Domogan appealed to the BOC for
consideration of the plight of the
“ukay-ukay” traders.
“I hope the BOC will give consideration to these ukay-ukay
vendors as they were not the importers of these items but were merely buyers
and it was not their obligation to pay the customs duties and taxes for these
goods,” the mayor said.
BOC operatives raided a total of 11 wagwag warehouses
located in Hilltop, Bonifacio St. and Magsaysay Avenue and confiscated over
3,000 bales of smuggled used clothing, comforters and other garments.
The warehouse owners were given three days to show proof of
legality of the shipment of said items.
The mayor said the BOC should go after the importers of the
goods even as he urged the warehouse owners to cooperate with the BOC in the
identification of these contacts by providing details and any helpful
information even if most of their transactions are done only through the
electronic means.
He expressed hope that BOC will give respite to the local
traders through a compromise settlement to address their plight and to prevent
any adverse effect in the business which has thrived in the city for many years
now.
These warehouses are suppliers of most wagwag retail
businesses in the city including the flourishing night market.
The mayor also said the city government should not be blamed
or accused of tolerating this illegal act.
“The issue here is not the sale of these second hand goods
which we do not prohibit in the city. The issue is that these items got
through and got in the country without the payment of customs duties and
taxes. So the BOC should also check how this happened and investigate its
own backyard,” the mayor said.
BOC information and assistance division acting chief
CharoLagamon, in a press statement, said the seized articles are “mostly
branded apparel from the United States and Canada… believed to have entered the
country through locators at the Subic and Clark Freeport zones as well as the
Cavite Export Processing Zone in Rosario, Cavite as scrap fabric intended for
manufacture and subsequent export as rags.”
“An investigation by the Bureau’s Intelligence Group,
however, found that certain locators inside economic zones use their privilege
to import raw materials tax-free to smuggle used clothing in the guise of scrap
fabric. These locators then sell the used clothing dealers who then supply
local ‘ukay-ukay’ business owners;
“Export Manufacturing Enterprises registered with the
Philippine Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) and located at PEZA Zones are allowed
tax-free and duty-free importation of raw materials, capital equipment,
machineries and spare parts. They are also exempted from paying wharfage dues
and export tax, impost or fees;
“However, Republic Act Number 4653 (An Act to Safeguard the
Health of the People and Maintain the Dignity of the Nation by Declaring it a
National Policy to Prohibit the Commercial Importation of Textile Articles
Commonly Known as Used Clothing and Rags), which has been in effect since 1966,
bans the commercial importation of used clothing.”
She earlier said the seized used clothing will be “subjected
to seizure and later, forfeiture proceedings in favor of the government.
Follow-up operations will commence to identify and file cases against the
erring importers and traders.”
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