The Centre for Food Safety, Hong Kong has published the list of banned Indian spice variants on its website
Several Philippine senators on Monday slammed Customs authorities for shaming the 10 flight attendants caught with around 40kg of onions and fruits upon their arrival from Dubai and Riyadh.
The items were confiscated after the cabin crew members failed to present import permits, which is required for all fresh food brought inside the country, including those for personal use.
The senators called the Customs officers’ action “cruel” and “unacceptable” during a meeting on the country’s onion crisis. In Manila, prices of the staple vegetable had skyrocketed to Dh40 per kilogramme.
Senator Raffy Tulfo criticised the seizure, stressing that the Bureau of Customs should be chasing after “big-time smugglers” instead.
“Why are you after these (flight attendants) and not the big-time smugglers? Perhaps those real criminals are in your offices all the time. Shame on you. You humiliated these cabin crew who only wanted to bring something for their families,” Tulfo was quoted in a local media report.
Senator JV Ejercito also questioned how millions of worth of other goods are able to pass through Customs inspections.
“Philippine Airlines crew charged for smuggling of onions — with a value of only $100 to $150, and yet smuggled shipments worth millions are able to enter the country. Are we really zeroing in on these cabin crew members while the big-time smugglers and protectors can get away with the crime?” Ejercito said, as reported by local media.
The 10 flight attendants of the country’s flagship carrier Philippine Airlines tried to bring home 27kg of onions, 10.5kg of lemons, and 1kg of strawberries and blueberries.
Charging these people with smuggling is “cruel” and “unusual”, said Senator Imee Marcos, sister of the current Philippine president, Bongbong Marcos.
kirstin@khaleejtimes.com
ALSO READ:
The Centre for Food Safety, Hong Kong has published the list of banned Indian spice variants on its website
Regulations lag pace of climate change. Air pollution kills 860,000 people each year
The two Muslim neighbours were involved in unprecedented tit-for-tat military strikes this year
Attacks online include insults, sexist and sexual comments, and physical threats, including death threats to journalists and their families
AI tools imitating human intelligence are widely used in newsrooms around the world to transcribe sound files, summarise texts and translate
Of these, 90 families, or 468 people, returned over the Torkham crossing, according to the Taliban-led Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation
It allows American spy agencies to surveil foreigners abroad using data drawn from US digital infrastructure such as internet service providers
The incident happened shortly after jury selection for the hush-money trial was completed