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Hong KongHealth & Environment

HK$48,430 for roast pork lunchbox: Taiwan fines passenger from Hong Kong for bringing in banned meat

  • Traveller was carrying lunchbox filled with Cantonese-style meats, including pork, which is banned due to African swine fever concerns
  • Customs dog sniffed out food and passenger was issued fine but deported after being unable to pay

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The food included rice with roast pork and soy sauce chicken, both typical Cantonese dishes. Photo: Handout
Danny Mok

An Indonesian passenger travelling from Hong Kong to Taiwan has been deported after being unable to pay a NT$200,000 (HK$48,430) fine for bringing in a lunchbox with roast pork, contravening import regulations, local media has reported.

The traveller arrived in Taipei on April 30 with the lunchbox containing a combination of Cantonese-style roast meats, news outlets reported on Sunday.

From a picture posted online, the food included rice with roast pork and soy sauce chicken, both typical Cantonese dishes.

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A customs detector dog sniffed out the contraband and alerted its handlers. The visitor was fined NT$200,000 on the spot for the undeclared pork.

But the individual was unable to pay the penalty immediately and was deported and instructed to settle the fine before entering Taiwan again, the media reports said.

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Taiwanese authorities have imposed strict controls on the import of pork from areas where cases of African swine fever have been detected since 2018.

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