Law -
Customs & Excise (Guidelines)
2
Brussels
accused British Customs of disproportionate
tactics in tackling people bringing excessive
amounts of alcohol and tobacco into the UK. The
UK Government has been told it has two months to
satisfy the commission its approach is not in
breach of EU or face legal action.
They say people can bring in any amount of booze
and tobacco for personal use. UK Customs have
been seizing alcohol and tobacco and confiscating
vehicles if they think goods will be sold. The
Treasury said it is losing huge amounts of tax
revenue as people bring in cigarettes and alcohol
from across the Channel, where duty tends to be
lower.
The commission has already formally told the
government to justify the tactics. Now it has
gone further and warned that Britain could be
taken to the European Court of Justice for
breaching EU rules on the free movement of goods
and cross-border shopping.
A statement said - "The commission has
decided to send the UK a formal request to amend
its policies relating to excise duties and
cross-border shopping for tobacco and alcohol.
The commission's request concerns the policy of
seizing goods and sometimes cars even for minor
offences. The commission considers that such
seizures are disproportionate to the gravity of
the offence in some situations and represent an
obstacle to the free movement of goods subject to
excise duties in the internal market. If there is
no satisfactory response to the reasoned opinion
within two months the commission may refer the
matter to the Court of Justice."
European Commissioner Frits Bolkestein, who
overseas taxation and customs, said,
"Cross-border shopping is a fundamental
right under EU law and should not be regarded as
a form of tax evasion, even if it does give rise
to revenue losses for the UK Exchequer." A
spokesman for the Treasury said the UK Government
would not be 'lectured' by someone 'pretending to
be a friend of the British tourist'.
He said, "We fully support British shoppers'
rights to bring back as much tobacco and alcohol
as they like from the Continent for their own
consumption. Our sanctions regime is designed to
protect those rights while deterring people from
breaking the law, and it is entirely
proportionate to a smuggling problem that funds
organised crime and costs the British taxpayer
£4bn a year."
The spokesman added that the commission wheels
out this same spin twice a year, pretending to be
the friend of the British tourist, once before
the summer holidays and once before the Christmas
booze cruises. He added, "It is a cynical
worn-out ploy to obtain a good day's coverage in
the British press, and everyone should see
through it for what it is."
This is yet another example of the innocent
shopper being criminalized simply because the
authorities in this country are totally inept and
incapable of catching the real criminals.
Incidentally, the Treasury can't 'lose' huge
amounts of tax revenue if it never had it in the
first place!
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