Customs Finds Illegal Chinese Apparel Shipments
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Pepper [2011-05-20]
US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has identified more than 1,000 cargo containers of Chinese apparel that it says were illegally transshipped into the United States, and it will charge the shipments against Chinese import quotas. The containers, entering the United States in 2006 and 2007, contained more than 4 million dozens of apparel items labeled as coming from countries other than China, but in fact, according to CBP, they were Chinese goods.
In announcing the action, CBP Commissioner Ralph Basham said: “US Customs and Border Protection is committed to strongly enforcing our trade agreements, and we will continue to work with members of the trade community and other federal agencies to pursue importers who make false declarations in order to circumvent import quotas.”
CBP maintains a trade enforcement program to ensure compliance with laws and regulations governing all imports. CBP says because there is a high risk that traders of textiles and apparel products will attempt to avoid quota restrictions, it has designated textiles and apparel as a “ priority trade issue.”
In the current case, CBP said 11 different countries were incorrectly declared as the country of origin for the Chinese apparel, which is valued at more than $80 million. The products were in 10 different product categories including large quantities of cotton knit shirts and cotton trousers.
The US Association of Importers of Textiles and Apparel (USAITA) took issue with the customs action, saying it was “politically motivated.” Laura E. Jones, USAITA executive director, said, “ This is politics pure and simple. With the quotas due to end in less than six months, the CBP has to justify the resources it has dedicated to rummaging through foreign factories and then detaining and seizing apparel shipments since 2006.”