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Smugglers at sea move closer to marine boundaries of Hong Kong and mainland China to avoid being caught

Fishing boats turned into ‘mobile warehouses’ on marine boundaries as 57 per cent jump in cases revealed

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Hong Kong Customs detains a fishing vessel involved in suspected smuggling. Photo; handout

Smuggling gangs have moved their activities closer to the marine boundaries of Hong Kong and the mainland to avoid being caught.

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Deputy Commissioner of Customs Hermes Tang Yi-hoi said local fishing boats appeared to have been used over the past three months as “mobile warehouses’’.

Hermes Tang Yi-hoi, Deputy Commissioner of Customs, briefs the media on their two brand new vessels at Customs Marine Base in Kwai Chung. Photo: Nora Tam
Hermes Tang Yi-hoi, Deputy Commissioner of Customs, briefs the media on their two brand new vessels at Customs Marine Base in Kwai Chung. Photo: Nora Tam

Among the items distributed to mainland counterparts at boundaries were endangered species and expensive food, such as bird’s nest and lobsters. The change in tactics followed a rise in smuggling at sea, with the number of cases jumping year-on-year by 57 per cent to 33 in the first four months of 2016.

That number is more than half of the 61 cases recorded in the whole of last year.

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Overall, customs netted items worth HK$18.2 million on water in the first four months of the year and made 54 arrests.

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