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Hong Kong customs to meet Guangdong counterparts to discuss resurgence in parallel trading, vows crackdown

  • Traders buy goods in city to resell in mainland China at profit, bypassing hefty import and value-added tariffs
  • Sheung Shui MTR station hotspot has returned to prominence after resumption of regular travel between Hong Kong and mainland

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Travellers pack items into suitcases in Sheung Shui earlier this month. Photo: K.Y. Cheng

Hong Kong customs has vowed to crack down on a resurgence in parallel trading after the full reopening of the border with mainland China, announcing officers will meet their Guangdong counterparts this week to discuss dealing with the smuggling activities.

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Parallel goods traders have been spotted operating outside Sheung Shui MTR station at the Hong Kong border town since regular travel between the city and the mainland resumed on February 6, according to government sources.

The traders, who buy goods in the city to resell on the mainland at a profit, have smuggled items such as cosmetic products, red wine and dried seafood, across the border in an effort to evade hefty mainland import and value-added tariffs, the Post has learned.

People loading up suitcases on the footpath in Sheung Shui, like these travellers in February, have irked some locals in recent years. Photo: K.Y. Cheng
People loading up suitcases on the footpath in Sheung Shui, like these travellers in February, have irked some locals in recent years. Photo: K.Y. Cheng

A source on Monday said intelligence indicated the cross-border couriers were mainly local residents who were paid anywhere from dozens of dollars to more than HK$100 (US$13) per trip to bring goods across the border.

“[Couriers] pick up these items on the streets outside Sheung Shui MTR station. After crossing the border, they hand the goods to designated people outside the mainland checkpoint in Shenzhen,” he said. “Each round trip takes less than an hour. They could make two or three trips a day and pocket several hundred dollars.”

The station is only one stop from the border crossings at Lo Wu and the Lok Ma Chau Spur Line.

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To tackle the parallel trading activities, a team of customs officers led by Assistant Commissioner for Intelligence and Investigation Mark Woo Wai-kwan will go to Guangzhou on Wednesday and meet their Guangdong counterparts.

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