Man arrested for smuggling durian trees valued at 1 million baht to Laos

A Thai man has been arrested at the Customs Department’s border checkpoint in the northeastern province of Ubon Ratchathani. He was caught trying to deliver durian trees, valued at around one million baht, to a customer in Laos.

The Head of Chongmek Customs House at the border of Thailand and Laos, Wanlop Suiraksa, told Thai media that they received leaked information that the durian trees would be smuggled to Laos yesterday. While customs officers and police monitored cars and travellers at the checkpoint, they spotted a silver pickup about to pass the checkpoint to the Laos area. Then, they asked the driver to pull over to the side of the road for inspection because the rear of the truck was covered with a black plastic sheet.

The officers found 6,500 durian trees packed on the truck. The 21 year old driver, Narongsak Sichana, now faces charges of violating the Plant Variety Protection Act by smuggling preserved plants without permission. He could face a penalty of up to 1 year in jail, a fine of 4,000 baht, or both. The driver also violated the Customs Act by exporting restricted products without permission.

The driver told officials that he was hired to deliver durian trees to a Lao customer living in Pakse city. He said this Lao farmer had nearly 40 acres of plantation and ordered durian trees from Thailand at 150 to 200 baht each. He added that he did not know that delivering durian trees out of the country was illegal. He claimed that the person who hired him had already asked permission from the Customs Department.

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According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, 11 preserved plants are durian, pomelo, longan, lychee, tamarind, coconut, pineapple, salak, Pueraria Mirifica herb and thong khruea herb or Butea superba. These preserved plants require permission before exporting.

Aside from delivering durian trees out of the country, exporting unripe durian is also illegal. Anyone selling or exporting unripe durians will be considered to be misleading customers. That person could face a penalty of up to 3 years in jail and a fine of up to 60,000 baht.

SOURCE: Dailynews

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Petch Petpailin

Petpailin, or Petch, is a Thai translator and writer for The Thaiger who focuses on translating breakingThai news stories into English. With a background in field journalism, Petch brings several years of experience to the English News desk at The Thaiger. Before joining The Thaiger, Petch worked as a content writer for several known blogging sites in Bangkok, including Happio and The Smart Local. Her articles have been syndicated by many big publishers in Thailand and internationally, including the Daily Mail, The Sun and the Bangkok Post. She is a news writer who stops reading news on the weekends to spend more time cafe hopping and petting dwarf shrimp! But during office hours, you can find Petch on LinkedIn and you can reach her by email at petch@thethaiger.com.

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