Latest news with #illegalgoods


BBC News
31-07-2025
- Business
- BBC News
Kent sees 588% rise in shops having illegal goods seized
Kent County Council (KCC) has seen a rise of more than 588% in the number of shops having illegal goods seized in the past two years, BBC's England Data Unit has 2024-25, KCC reported illegal goods being seized from 117 shops, compared to 77 in 2023-24 and 17 in 2022-23."This increase is not a reflection of a worsening problem alone, but also of a deliberate and strategic intensification of enforcement activity across the county," said a council Home Office has been contacted for a response. KCC added that its trading standards team seized almost two million illegal cigarettes, 605.5kg (95st 5lb) of hand-rolling tobacco and 25,476 illicit vapes in 2024-25."These seizures were concentrated in areas such as Canterbury, Thanet, and Ashford, and included sophisticated concealment methods such as hidden compartments behind showers," it of Information request responses from 169 councils across Britain showed 3,624 shops in Britain had illegal cigarettes, tobacco or vaping products seized from them in the 2024-25 financial year - down slightly from 3,664 in BBC investigation also found many shops seized from were convenience stores, mini marts and vape Lowman, chief executive of the Association of Convenience Stores, said he supported enforcement action against businesses knowingly selling illegal products. He added: "At the moment, too many shady businesses are taking the risk on selling illicit goods because the financial reward outweighs any possible repercussions."


The Guardian
18-06-2025
- Business
- The Guardian
EU accuses China's AliExpress of ‘systemic failure' over illegal goods
The European Commission has accused online retailer AliExpress of a 'systemic failure' to prevent the sale of illegal and dangerous goods on its platform, as Brussels stepped up its case against the Chinese company. Issuing formal findings of an investigation launched in March last year, EU regulators said on Wednesday that AliExpress was failing to do enough to prevent the sale of counterfeit clothes and dangerous children's toys, among other items. The company, which claims 104 million monthly users in the EU, did not devote enough resources to content moderation to take down illegal goods on sale on its platform, regulators said. An EU official said the company – which is owned by Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce group founded by the Chinese billionaire Jack Ma – had 'underestimated the general risk of the sale of illegal products'. The official added: 'General measures they have in place to avoid the dissemination of illegal products do not work properly - it shows a systemic failure.' The European Commission said these were preliminary findings, pending further investigation and responses from AliExpress. If EU officials uphold the verdict, the company can in theory be fined up to 6% of global turnover under the EU's Digital Services Act (DSA). AliExpress has, however, convinced EU regulators to close aspects of their investigation, by pledging to take action to tackle 'hidden links' that take users to an illegal product via a legitimate one. The online marketplace promised to develop a system to monitor and detect hidden links to illegal products, such as food supplements and medicines, which have been offered for sale via legitimate items. Such hidden links were also said to have taken children to pornographic material. AliExpress also promised greater transparency over its advertising systems and availability of its data to researchers, which Brussels said addressed concerns in these areas. The European Commission described the commitments as 'legally binding' and warned that AliExpress could face fines for failure to follow through. The investigation comes under the DSA, which is intended to protect people from online harms such as disinformation, illegal content and dangerous products. The act imposes the strictest requirements on the largest companies with more than 45 million users, including Amazon, Google, Meta and X. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion AliExpress said it had 'proactively engaged and closely collaborated with the European Commission throughout this process' and would continue to do so. 'The commission has recognised our committed approach to ensure a high level of consumer protection and transparency through the breadth and depth of these voluntary commitments offered and agreed,' it said. 'We are confident that a positive and compliant result will be achieved through continuing our mutual dialogue with the commission to address any remaining concerns on the DSA.'