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Hong Kong customs seizes HK$33 million of illicit cigarettes hidden on tugboat

Officers arrest three men, aged from 26 to 57, after searching vessel and finding 7.4 million black-market cigarettes in hidden compartment

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Government tax revenue from the cigarettes will have brought an estimated HK$24 billion if legally imported, according to authorities. Photo: Facebook/Kong Kong Customs

Hong Kong customs has arrested three men and confiscated HK$33 million (US$4.2 million) worth of untaxed cigarettes hidden in a secret cargo hold on a tugboat, after intercepting the vessel that arrived from mainland China.

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The Customs and Excise Department said on Friday they had seized the 7.4 million black-market cigarettes the day before, following increased sea patrols prompted by intelligence on cross-border sea smuggling activities.

The tugboat was spotted taking a roundabout path in the southwest waters of Hong Kong after entering the city from the mainland at daybreak on Thursday, according to Inspector Chan King-fung of customs’ marine support unit.

He said the vessel, carrying three Hong Kong crew members, was intercepted off Aberdeen.

“The crew claimed it did not carry any declared goods aboard, but their nervous behaviour aroused our suspicion,” he said.

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Customs officers searched the vessel and found a metal plate concealing the entrance to a secret compartment, after removing two huge water tanks from the boat’s cargo hold.

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