The
smugglers were caught out when X-ray machinery at customs in Chubu
International Airport, Aichi prefecture, showed up at least five blocks of gold
in each woman's abdomen
|
Seven South Korean women hid around 40 blocks of gold in
their rectums ●Their audacious plot was foiled after they landed at Chubu
Airport in Japan ●They have been fined for smuggling and trying to avoid
consumption tax
A group of South
Korean tourists went to painful lengths to avoid tax - by hiding blocks of
gold up their rectums.
It
is not the first time Chubu International Airport, Aichi
prefecture, Japan has
been targeted by smugglers intent on getting around consumption tax, with at
least two incidents just this year
The Asahi Shimbun report continues:
Seven
would-be smugglers, all women in their 50s and 60s, were caught out at customs
at Chubu International Airport, Japan, last month when X-rays revealed
each of them was carrying at least five metal objects in her abdomen.
Each
block weighed in at some 200 grams.
The
women, who had flown from Incheon International Airport in South Korea, will
get the gold back if they stump up a fine for smuggling and attempting to avoid
paying consumption tax.
Gold
smuggling in Japan has rocketed since 'consumption tax' - which covers
transactions in goods and services - was bumped up by 3%in 2014, according to
government officials.
Between
July 2016 and June 2017, nationwide tax evasion rose by 40%, totalling 870
million yen (£5.794 million) in just twelve months.
Customs
officials reported 467 cases of attempted smuggling and tax evasion in that
time, or a 60%increase.
But
staff at Chubu Airport, in Tokoname, admitted this was an unusual case.
Three-quarters
of gold smuggling cases reported in Japan involve the precious metal being
stowed among accessories or inside luggage handles.
But
it is not the first time air passengers have resorted to desperate measures to
dodge the Japanese consumption levy.
Six
people were arrested at the same airport last month after five gold bars valued
at 22.8 million yen (£151,000) were discovered in the toilet of a plane bound
for Tokyo.
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