
5,800 cartons of duty-unpaid cigarettes seized, 4 foreigners arrested
In an operation the Singapore Customs conducted on April 25, an industrial unit at Corporation Drive was found to be housing 5,861 cartons of duty-unpaid cigarettes.
A 34-year-old Indian national, a 27-year-old Chinese national and a 22-year-old Malaysian were arrested.
Officers also seized $6,100 in cash, suspected to be proceeds from the sale of the duty-unpaid cigarettes.
Further investigations identified a fourth suspect, a 47-year-old Malaysian man, who had allegedly driven the lorry with duty-unpaid cigarettes from Malaysia into Singapore earlier that day.
He was arrested at Woodlands Checkpoint on the same day.
Investigations revealed that unknown persons had allegedly engaged the Chinese national and the younger Malaysian to unload and repack the duty-unpaid cigarettes.
The Chinese national had, in turn, allegedly engaged the Indian national to assist in unloading the duty-unpaid cigarettes from the lorry in the industrial unit.
The total duty and GST evaded amounted to about $634,851.
Buying, selling, conveying, delivering, storing, keeping, possessing or dealing with duty-unpaid goods are serious offences.
Offenders can be fined up to 40 times the amount of duty and GST evaded and/or jailed for up to six years.
Vehicles used in the commission of such offences and proceeds of sales of duty-unpaid cigarettes are also liable to be forfeited.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
6 hours ago
- Business Times
Why are today's strongmen so obsessed with muscle?
LIBERALS have wasted no time in pointing to Karol Nawrocki's lack of qualifications for his new job as president of Poland. He has never previously held political office. He won by the narrowest of margins with 50.9 per cent of the vote. But Nawrocki possesses the one qualification that many national populists value above all other: a taste for physical strength laced with violence. Nawrocki is a former boxer who still likes to go a few rounds. He is also such an enthusiastic football supporter that he reportedly got the logos of his two favorite teams – Chelsea and Lechia Gdansk – tattooed on his chest. During the campaign, he admitted to taking part in 2009 in a 70-a-side-punch-up with fans of rival clubs, alongside scores of convicted criminals armed with clubs and brass-knuckles. He denied other violence-related accusations, such as that he moonlighted as a pimp during a stint working as a security guard at a hotel and that he has extensive contacts with the Polish underworld. His come-from-behind campaign featured videos of the candidate in the boxing ring and shooting range and a pledge to 'make Poland great again'. This emphasis on physical prowess laced with violence is commonplace on the nationalist right. The master of the genre is, of course, Vladimir Putin. Russia's president likes to pose doing macho things, such as hunting, shooting, fishing and ice-pool diving, often stripping down to his waist to reveal his rippling biceps and bare chest. He claims that he once stunned a Siberian tiger that was supposedly menacing a female journalist. In January 2007, Putin brought his black labrador into a meeting with then German chancellor Angela Merkel, a well-known canophobe, saying 'I'm sure it will behave'. The mini-Putins in Russia's sphere of influence all cultivate the same macho style. The head of the Chechnya Republic, Ramzan Kadyrov, frequently dresses in military garb and brandishes guns. He once kept a pet tiger, threatening to set it on journalists who wrote disobliging things about him. The president of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, presents himself as a virile farmer, with his fluffy white dog giving him the air of a James Bond villain. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi boasts about his '56-inch chest' and claims that, as a boy, he went swimming among crocodiles. He also maintains a band of uniformed supporters, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), who perform calisthenics dressed in skimpy shorts and march through the streets burning mosques. Meanwhile, the Chinese propaganda machine claims that President Xi Jinping regularly carried 100 kilograms of wheat over 5 kilometres without switching shoulders during the Cultural Revolution, and likens his long ascent to power to 'the training of a kung-fu master'. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan once christened the opening of a new stadium in Istanbul by playing himself in a football friendly, and scoring a hat-trick – all on live TV. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up And US President Donald Trump is such a devoted wrestling fan that the World Wrestling Entertainment has made him a 'hall of famer'. He loves a physical display of power: He has been agitating for a military parade in Washington, DC, since first coming to power. His solutions to the problem of illegal immigrants during his first term included shooting to kill, shooting in the kneecaps, roasting with heat rays, or digging a moat and filling it with alligators. He proudly hung a portrait of himself in his Mar-a-Lago estate fashioned out of bullet casings – a present from the self-declared 'Trump of the tropics', former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro. Trump's infatuation with Putin is the subject of all sorts of conspiracy theories. But the simplest explanation is that Putin is the world's leading exemplar of the quality Trump most admires. Other members of the strongmen club fascinated the US leader for the same reason. He nicknamed Erdogan 'the Sultan', and told everybody how much he admired his 'seemingly endless ability to get his own way at home'. He was much impressed by the fact that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's bodyguards ran alongside his limousine. Kristi Noem, Trump's homeland security secretary, endorsed Nawrocki's candidacy on May 27 with the words: 'Donald Trump is a strong leader for us, but you have the opportunity to have just as strong a leader in Karol.' The right's cult of physical strength is not incidental. It is a metaphor for a much broader argument: that liberalism is synonymous with weakness and that the only way to escape from such weakness is to embrace headstrong, authoritarian leaders. Liberalism's preoccupation with rules and consensus leads to paralysis, the argument goes, and its concern for society's casualties leads to self-paralysis. Therefore, what the world needs, especially in periods of uncertainty, are strong leaders who can cut through the nonsense and uphold their nation's traditions. This cult of strength helps to explain the growing support for right-wing parties among young men. Trump won young men (aged 18 to 29) by 14 points, while Kamala Harris won young women by 18 points. Both British politician Nigel Farage's Reform Party and Germany's Alternative for Germany party also do well among young men. It also helps to explain the right's broader appeal to people who are fed up with political paralysis. Across the world, right-wing parties demonise the bureaucratic blob that protects the status quo and human rights lawyers who make it difficult to stem the flow of refugees. This obsession with strength also dictates the right's governing style. Everywhere they gain power, national populists undermine independent institutions and gather power to the executive – most obviously in countries with weak or non-existent democratic traditions such as Russia but also in the West. Trump is systematically weakening the 'checks and balances' that were supposed to limit the president's power, including the courts, the civil service, the press and Congress. He likes to assure friendly audiences that 'I have the right to do whatever I want as president', quoting Napoleon by saying 'he who saves his country does not violate the law'. Yet the equation of liberalism with weakness and autocracy with strength is a serious error. The liberal order stood up to the threat of Communism after World War II through a combination of internal consensus building and external relentlessness. Authoritarian rule tends to be marred by faction fighting and brittleness, making democracies far more durable than strongmen regimes. And this is an error that could have rapid consequences in Poland. The country has been a model of strength under centrist rule, with annual average growth of 4 per cent and the largest army in Europe after Russia, Ukraine and Turkey. The election of a supposed strongman to the presidency will inevitably make Poland weaker. BLOOMBERG


AsiaOne
13 hours ago
- AsiaOne
China issues bounty for hackers it says are linked to Taiwan
BEIJING — The public security bureau in the Chinese city of Guangzhou has put up an undisclosed bounty for more than 20 people it suspects carried out cyber attacks in China, the official news agency Xinhua said on Thursday (June 5), stepping up accusations against Taipei. The authorities said the hackers were linked to the Taiwan government and named one of them as Ning Enwei. There was no information on the size of the bounty in Chinese state media. Chinese authorities accused Taiwan of organising, planning and premeditating attacks on key sectors such as military, aerospace, government departments, energy and transportation, maritime affairs, science and technology research firms in China as well as in special administration regions Hong Kong and Macau, Xinhua said. Xinhua, citing a cybersecurity report, said the Taiwan "information, communication and digital army" has co-operated with US anti-Chinese forces to conduct public opinion and cognitive warfare against China, secretly instigate revolution and attempt to disrupt public order in China. Taiwan's government did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A senior Taiwan security official told Reuters that the Chinese allegations were invented, saying Beijing was trying to shift the focus from Czech and European scrutiny over alleged Chinese hacking activities there. "They fabricated a false narrative to shift the focus. It's a very typical behaviour by the Chinese Communist Party," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity given the sensitivity of the matter. "No amount of storytelling can change the fact that Beijing is not only a regional trouble maker, but also a common international threat to the online world." China also said Taiwan had longstanding co-operation with the US National Security Agency, the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence agencies for the United States' "Asia-Pacific Strategy", calling it Taiwan's attempt to gain independence through relying on the United States. "The US intelligence department has long provided personnel training and technical equipment support for Taiwan's 'information, communication and digital army', and many police stations have sent 'hunting' teams to Taiwan, to launch a cyber attacks on China," according to a social media post by an account linked to Chinese state television. Last week authorities in Guangzhou, the capital of the southern Guangdong province, attributed a cyberattack on an unnamed technology company to the Taiwan government, saying Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive Party supported the "overseas hacker organisation" responsible. The accusation prompted Taiwan to blame China for peddling false information, saying it was China who was carrying out hacking against the island. China views Taiwan as its own territory. Taiwan's democratically elected government rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims. Chinese courts and legal bodies have no jurisdiction in separately governed Taiwan, whose government has repeatedly complained about Beijing's "long armed jurisdiction" efforts. [[nid:718714]]


AsiaOne
13 hours ago
- AsiaOne
China issues bounty for hackers it says are linked to Taiwan , Asia News
BEIJING — The public security bureau in the Chinese city of Guangzhou has put up an undisclosed bounty for more than 20 people it suspects carried out cyber attacks in China, the official news agency Xinhua said on Thursday (June 5), stepping up accusations against Taipei. The authorities said the hackers were linked to the Taiwan government and named one of them as Ning Enwei. There was no information on the size of the bounty in Chinese state media. Chinese authorities accused Taiwan of organising, planning and premeditating attacks on key sectors such as military, aerospace, government departments, energy and transportation, maritime affairs, science and technology research firms in China as well as in special administration regions Hong Kong and Macau, Xinhua said. Xinhua, citing a cybersecurity report, said the Taiwan "information, communication and digital army" has co-operated with US anti-Chinese forces to conduct public opinion and cognitive warfare against China, secretly instigate revolution and attempt to disrupt public order in China. Taiwan's government did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A senior Taiwan security official told Reuters that the Chinese allegations were invented, saying Beijing was trying to shift the focus from Czech and European scrutiny over alleged Chinese hacking activities there. "They fabricated a false narrative to shift the focus. It's a very typical behaviour by the Chinese Communist Party," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity given the sensitivity of the matter. "No amount of storytelling can change the fact that Beijing is not only a regional trouble maker, but also a common international threat to the online world." China also said Taiwan had longstanding co-operation with the US National Security Agency, the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence agencies for the United States' "Asia-Pacific Strategy", calling it Taiwan's attempt to gain independence through relying on the United States. "The US intelligence department has long provided personnel training and technical equipment support for Taiwan's 'information, communication and digital army', and many police stations have sent 'hunting' teams to Taiwan, to launch a cyber attacks on China," according to a social media post by an account linked to Chinese state television. Last week authorities in Guangzhou, the capital of the southern Guangdong province, attributed a cyberattack on an unnamed technology company to the Taiwan government, saying Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive Party supported the "overseas hacker organisation" responsible. The accusation prompted Taiwan to blame China for peddling false information, saying it was China who was carrying out hacking against the island. China views Taiwan as its own territory. Taiwan's democratically elected government rejects Beijing's sovereignty claims. Chinese courts and legal bodies have no jurisdiction in separately governed Taiwan, whose government has repeatedly complained about Beijing's "long armed jurisdiction" efforts. [[nid:718714]]