Chinese customs seize over 40,000 fake Labubu toys
In Guangdong province, 20,599 suspected counterfeit products were uncovered during three separate inspections. PHOTO: WECHAT/CHINA CUSTOMS
BEIJING - Chinese customs authorities have recently intercepted over 40,000 counterfeit Labubu, a top seller in Pop Mart products, which has seen growing global demand.
The Gongbei Customs in Guangdong province uncovered 20,599 suspected counterfeit products on June 12, including blind-box toys and plush figures, during three separate inspections of outbound transshipment trucks at the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge Customs checkpoint, according to the General Administration of Customs on J une 18 .
Many of the items closely resembled characters from Pop Mart's popular Labubu series, but most lacked proper trademark labels.
Following confirmation from the intellectual property rights holder, the seized goods were deemed to have unauthorised use of the company's trademark and copyrighted character designs, violating its legal protections.
The holder has formally applied for customs protection, and the cases are currently under further legal process, it said.
This is not the only case, considering the growing demand of this 'cute-ugly' toy across the world.
In June, some domestic customs reported multiple cases of intercepting the counterfeit Labubu toys.
In Zhejiang's Ningbo, the Beilun Customs officers confiscated 20,240 plush toys and plastic cups that were found to infringe on the Labubu Spring Elf series.
In another case, officers at the Shanghai Pudong International Airport seized 5,961 toys falsely declared as 'dinosaur toy' or 'plush toys', all bearing Pop Mart's trademark without authorisation.
Customs authorities have reminded exporters and their agents that, under China's Customs Law, all goods must be truthfully declared, including their intellectual property status.
Documentation proving legal use of trademarks or copyrighted designs must be submitted when required.
Infringing goods are subject to confiscation and fines. In severe cases, criminal charges may be pursued in accordance with the law, the authorities added. CHINA DAILY/ASIA NEWS NETWORK
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
2 hours ago
- Straits Times
Australia probes Nauru-China business deal
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Under a 2024 security treaty, Nauru must seek Australia's agreement before it signs any bilateral accords on maritime security, defence and policing. SYDNEY - Australia was on Aug 19 investigating whether Pacific microstate Nauru breached a security treaty by inking a lucrative business deal with a Chinese company. Nauru last week announced it had signed a US$650 million (S$834.40 million) economic development agreement with the China Rural Revitilisation and Development Corporation. Australian Minister for Pacific Island Affairs Pat Conroy said officials were looking into whether that deal complied with a recent security pact between Canberra and Nauru. '(Australia) is engaging with the government of Nauru about whether it activates parts of our treaty,' Mr Conroy told reporters. 'That is a really important treaty for us – that helps position us as a security partner of choice with Nauru.' Australia and Nauru announced a landmark security treaty in December 2024, advancing Canberra's aim of blunting China's growing regional influence. Under the deal, Nauru must seek Australia's agreement before it signs any bilateral accords on maritime security, defence and policing. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore What led to Changi Airport runway incursion involving 2 China Eastern Airlines planes in Aug 2024 Life Local indie theatre The Projector to cease operations on Aug 19 after a decade Singapore 'I vaped when I woke up until I slept': More youth vaping to cope with stress, say social workers Asia Singaporean man sentenced to 72 years' jail in Malaysia for murdering wife and stepson Singapore 4 days' jail for former pre-school teacher who kicked and bruised pupil's shin Life Disrupted sleep, steroid psychosis: How chronic sinus condition affected one S'pore hawker's life World Trump's art of the 'peace' deal for Ukraine and Russia Nauru also agreed to consult Australia if other parties look to strike agreements granting them access to critical infrastructure such as ports and airfields or its banking sector. In return, Nauru receives tens of millions of dollars to prop up its government budget and bolster its stretched police force. Nauru in 2024 surprised many Pacific watchers when it abruptly severed diplomatic links with Taiwan in favour of Beijing. Nauru's Foreign Affairs Minister Lionel Aingimea travelled to Beijing to sign the business deal last week. The China Rural Revitilisation and Development Corporation agreed to invest in key sectors such as agriculture and fisheries, according to a Nauru government release. Nauru, population 12,500, is one of the world's smallest countries with a mainland measuring just 20sq km. It is considered especially vulnerable to climate change. AFP

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Russian attack on Poltava shows Putin does not want peace, Ukraine says
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox KYIV - An overnight Russian attack that rocked the central Ukrainian city of Kremenchuk and left hundreds of customers in the Poltava region without power shows that Russian President Vladimir Putin does not want peace, regional Ukrainian officials said. During a summit at the White House, U.S. President Donald Trump told President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Monday that the United States would help guarantee Ukraine's security in any deal to end Russia's war there. After the meeting, Trump called the Russian leader and began arranging a meeting between Putin and Zelenskiy. "At the very same time when Putin was assuring Trump over the phone that he seeks peace, and when President Volodymyr Zelenskiy was holding talks at the White House with European leaders about a just peace, Putin's army launched yet another massive attack on Kremenchuk," Vitalii Maletskyi, mayor of the city that lies in the Poltava region, said on the Telegram messaging app. Maletskyi added that tens of blasts shook the city. "Once again, the world has seen that Putin does not want peace — he wants to destroy Ukraine." The scale of the attack was not clear. Ukraine's Air Force said overnight that the central Ukrainian region was under the threat of a cruise missile attack. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Two China Eastern Airlines planes involved in runway incursion at Changi Airport in Aug 2024 Life Local indie theatre The Projector to cease operations on Aug 19 after a decade Singapore 'I vaped when I woke up until I slept': More youth vaping to cope with stress, say social workers Asia Singaporean man sentenced to 72 years' jail in Malaysia for murdering wife and stepson Singapore 4 days' jail for former pre-school teacher who kicked and bruised pupil's shin Life Disrupted sleep, steroid psychosis: How chronic sinus condition affected one S'pore hawker's life World Trump's art of the 'peace' deal for Ukraine and Russia Poltava Governor Volodymyr Kohut said that the attack damaged administrative buildings of a local power infrastructure operation. "Fortunately, there were no casualties," Kohut said on Telegram. He said that in the Lubny district nearly 1,500 residential and 119 commercial customers were left without power. There was no immediate comment from Russia. Both sides have been targeting infrastructure key to the military in their strikes during the war on each other's territory, including energy infrastructure. Russia said on Tuesday that Ukraine's overnight drone attack sparked fires at an oil refinery and a hospital roof in the Volgograd region. REUTERS

Straits Times
16 hours ago
- Straits Times
Hong Kong arrests 2 over suspected S$8.6m water scam
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Officers seized around 2,600 bottles of water in a warehouse along with documents and electronic devices. HONG KONG - Hong Kong police said on Aug 18 they have arrested two people over a suspected scam involving a water supplier that may have cheated the government in a contract worth nearly US$7 million (S$8.99 million). A company named Xin Ding Xin won a deal in June to provide 1.88 million bottles of water which would go into dispensers in some government offices – the first time such a contract went to a Chinese brand, according to local media. But police said the firm was found to have relied on false documents during the tender process, claiming to source its water from another mainland Chinese supplier when in fact they had no business ties. Officers arrested a 61-year-old man and a 57-year-old woman for fraud on Aug 17, seizing around 2,600 bottles of water in a warehouse along with documents and electronic devices. The arrests have prompted water-cooler discussions across the Chinese finance hub on how bureaucrats missed the telltale signs of a scam when awarding a 36-month contract worth HK$52.9 million (S$8.6 million). Payment for the delivered batches has not yet been settled, according to police. The Government Logistics Department said on Aug 18 that it terminated its bottled water supply contract with Xin Ding Xin, as well as 'three other contracts for supply of chemicals which were affiliated with XDX's owner'. Christopher Hui, Hong Kong's secretary for financial services and the treasury, set up a dedicated task force following an urgent meeting on Aug 17. Hui also ordered 'remedial actions' and invited the Audit Commission to review the tender exercise. 'The incident has brought up concerns among government colleagues and drawn extensive attention from the public,' he said in a press release. Aside from the two arrests on Aug 17, one mainland Chinese man remains at large, police said. AFP