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Hong Kong customs officers uncover three times more airmailed drugs than last year

byCT Report
14/12/2017
in Uncategorized
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HONG KONG:The amount of drugs caught being smuggled in and out of Hong Kong via airmail has more than trebled in the first 11 months of this year against the same period last year, customs officials revealed on Wednesday. A top border guard said the rise of cross-border e-commerce was a factor behind the surge in postal smuggling, because it had boosted the total number of parcels in transit and given more opportunities for drug traffickers to go under the radar.

The total narcotics haul was 6,384kg, up 346 per cent year on year. Nearly 90 per cent of the confiscated drugs was the stimulant khat, a leaf that when chewed causes hallucinations. The amount of the drug seized was up 717 per cent to 5,721kg.

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Customs officers said smugglers were increasingly exploiting real company and home addresses in the city as destinations for drug parcels. Traffickers tell the unsuspecting recipients in advance that the package was wrongly sent to them, and arrange to go and pick it up later, thereby avoiding the suspicion of law enforcers.

“Culprits pretended to make business with the company and informed the company over email that they would send out samples for price quoting,” said Louise Ho Pui-shan, the Customs and Excise Department’s assistant commissioner, who oversees the ports and borders.

“Culprits then rang the company informing them about the ‘wrong’ parcel and asked the staff to keep the package for them and not to open it.” The smugglers, or their associates, would later go and pick up the package, completing its safe passage across the border.

Customs chiefs reminded companies to stay alert for unfamiliar customers who actively seek business with them, then later claim to have sent a parcel in error, asking staff not to open it.

Official figures showed that the number of drug smuggling cases via post was up 38 per cent year on year to 607. Among those cases, 30 per cent involved goods entering the city, while another 30 per cent were leaving. The remaining 40 per cent involved goods transiting.

Ho said smugglers tended to mail illegal goods frequently but in small packets, to reduce the size of potential losses.

“Many air parcels do not have electronic data as they are not required to declare [contents] in advance. It mainly relies on the experience and alertness of our officers in detecting such cases,” Ho said.

“Some goods in the same consignment are normal while some are illicit. If we did not open every item in the parcels, we would not be able to confirm [the forbidden goods].”

Ho said she believed the rise in postal smuggling was partly spurred by a surge in the volume of post in general, with the increasing popularity of e-commerce.

The city has recorded a general uptick in the number of parcels crossing the border.

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