PDA

View Full Version : Every cigarette to bear "SDPC" marking from Jan 1 next year


jdelpiero
11-09-2008, 12:28 AM
SINGAPORE : From 1 January 2009, all duty-paid cigarettes sold in Singapore will be marked with the letters "SDPC" to distinguish them from contraband cigarettes.

The letters "SDPC" stand for Singapore Duty-Paid Cigarette, and it is proof that the cigarette is legal.

This new requirement is part of Singapore Customs' effort to curb the selling and buying of illegal cigarettes.

According to Singapore Customs, Singapore is the first country to implement this regulation.

From January next year, all unmarked cigarettes would be deemed duty-unpaid and illegal.

Anyone found buying, selling or smoking cigarettes without the "SDPC" marking could be jailed or fined. For every packet of duty-unpaid cigarettes, the offender can be fined S$500.

Licensed retailers will start selling marked cigarettes from October. The Tobacco Association (Singapore) said the current stock of unmarked duty-paid cigarettes will not be recalled.

Fong Yong Kian, director-general, Singapore Customs, said: "We will be working together with the cigarette industry to phase out all the old cigarette stocks by January 1 next year. When our officers encounter cigarettes without the SDPC marking from January 1 next year, we will investigate it to check the origin of the cigarette.

"Our assessment is that it is unlikely that the SDPC markings will be counterfeited. This assessment is also shared by the industry. But nonetheless, we will be monitoring the situation very closely."

According to Singapore Customs, cigarette manufacturers were informed of this new marking requirement in April this year.

Those who buy their cigarettes from overseas for their own consumption should keep their receipts as proof of payment of duty and GST.

According to the Tobacco Association (Singapore), contraband cigarettes constitute 18 per cent of market share in Singapore.

It expects the new regulation to increase demand for duty-paid cigarettes, which would help offset the cost of marking every cigarette. - CNA/ms

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/imagegallery/store/phpC1QinN.jpg

amos_infinitus
11-09-2008, 01:10 AM
hmmm heard now if u r smokin e cops can come up check ur box n if is w/o e ugly pic it shows u r smokin contraband they will fine u. guess this is really to kill off e contraband man.

wyvern
11-09-2008, 07:32 AM
Sorry if I am off topic here. This reminds me what does the government or customs do with the contraband ciggarette they confusicated over the months...?

Do they get all and then labelled them with the wording "SDPC" and sent it back to the market to sell it...? so as to make it offically legal..? :)

meow
11-09-2008, 08:15 AM
maybe they repack it & sell them as duty free at the airport? :laugh:

cyc
11-09-2008, 08:56 AM
good, now my friend cannot get cheapo "made in M'sia" ciggie liao... told him to quit smoking donkey yrs ago, now's a good time, hehe... u see those "black" foreign workers smoking, u wonder where they get the $$$ to sustain their habit considering the amt of $$$ they earn... I bet a lot are contraband ones... if u're in those ciggie groups, u know where to get these cheapo ciggies...

des_yeo03
11-09-2008, 10:49 AM
Really a good move to kill off contraband cig. Trust them to think of this idea.

amos_infinitus
11-09-2008, 11:00 AM
maybe they repack it & sell them as duty free at the airport? :laugh:

they haf to count all e stock then sort into diff brands n types then send to a HQ then haf to dispose of em forgotten how but prob burning..

Surge
11-09-2008, 11:46 AM
I got caught once with Malaysia cigs by customs officers.:bang:
Had to pay $100 fine on the spot.
No money at that time so they followed me to ATM to withdraw. Still got official reciept from Customs dept....

every since then, i only smoke sg cigs already :yeah:

jdelpiero
11-09-2008, 04:28 PM
Sorry if I am off topic here. This reminds me what does the government or customs do with the contraband ciggarette they confusicated over the months...?

Do they get all and then labelled them with the wording "SDPC" and sent it back to the market to sell it...? so as to make it offically legal..? :)

officially.. i think they should be destroyed.

Koo
12-09-2008, 02:27 AM
Nah.... officiallly in SG, the contraband ciggarette are repacked and rename for the SG market/smokers. The "win-win suitution" is free and fat income is a sure thing for "the people above". Must award them for recycling this way!:moneyface :beatup: :duh:

Akira Fudou
12-09-2008, 02:41 AM
you sure they repacked? you are kidding right? The cigs actually taste differently with respect to their place of origin.

Koo
12-09-2008, 02:48 AM
Information is realiable from customs "friends".

wyvern
12-09-2008, 07:20 AM
Wah, thats a very very lucrative line to spin money. Not much difference to 'pirating'....:D

All along I thought these contraband cigs are destroyed...:o

Nah.... officiallly in SG, the contraband ciggarette are repacked and rename for the SG market/smokers. The "win-win suitution" is free and fat income is a sure thing for "the people above". Must award them for recycling this way!:moneyface :beatup: :duh:

cyc
12-09-2008, 08:30 AM
repacking is good... I always thot destroying those stuffs is a waste of resource... some pple create, some pple destroy, geez...

Koo
14-09-2008, 02:41 AM
repacking is good... I always thot destroying those stuffs is a waste of resource... some pple create, some pple destroy, geez...

Some "people above" makes other suffer and die more faster by "recycling" seized contraband ciggarette with the money going into their pockets. Anyway it is well know it is too hard to stem the flood of contraband ciggarette here as there is too much stress in life and willing buyers in Singapore.