KUALA LUMPUR: Approved Permit (AP) holders who misuse the permit should not be given a second chance, and their permits should be withdrawn, to serve as a warning to others.
To crime analyst Datuk Seri Akhbar Satar, Malaysia can save billions of ringgit by enforcing the law strictly so that nobody will be brave enough to commit the offence.
“Withdraw them (AP), make a note not to return them. APs have frequently being sold, we should give them to real entrepreneurs carrying out a business and not for them to break the law.
“We have to be strict on taxes as the people who import cars are rich and APs are given free as well. And to reap more profits, they even resort to forgery. This is not good and for companies who abuse them, MITI (International Trade and Industry Ministry) should seized their APs,” he told Bernama.
Meanwhile, he also suggested that the government needs to consider increasing the budget for the Royal Malaysian Customs Department so that they could have much more advanced technology.
“Some syndicates have more sophisticated equipment than us. There is a need to also ensure the Customs’ workplace is conducive to motivate them to be more effective,” he said.
Meanwhile, Malaysian Muslim Consumers Association of Malaysia (PPIM) chief activist Datuk Nadzim Johan said Customs might need to do thorough counter checking concerning some documents to ensure they were legitimate.
Crime analyst Datuk Seri Akhbar Satar. - NSTP/SALHANI IBRAHIM |
“It means he (enforcer) has to combine checking with a system which is ‘almost full proof’ which cannot be abused by syndicates which are experts in forging APs, avoiding taxes and others.
“There should be ‘counter checking’, for example the IC (identity card) which can be forged but upon checking online with the Registration Department, the real name of the IC holder would be revealed and so on,” he said.
On Friday, the Royal Malaysian Customs Department announced the seizure of 21 non-registered luxury vehicles worth RM12.2 million with suspected forged import documents in separate raids at two warehouses in Shah Alam, Selangor, on May 29.
Customs deputy director-general Datuk Azimah Abd Hamid said it was the biggest seizure of luxury cars in the Klang Valley this year, comprising six Lamborghini Huracans, Toyota Vellfire (seven), Toyota Estima (four), Mercedes Benz (two), BMW (one) and Toyota Alphard (one).
She said initial investigations found that the vehicles were documented as older cars with false manufacturing date to avoid paying higher taxes. - BERNAMA
Article by: New Straits Times
'DON'T GIVE SECOND CHANCE FOR AP ABUSERS
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