Cactus Export service helps local business owners meet growing overseas demand with next-day delivery
CITES Permit (Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species of wild fauna and flora) and Phytosanitary Certification are required by the customs authority, and import requirements vary by destination country
DHL’s cross border and customs expertise makes it easy for local sellers to export cactuses from Thailand to four destination countries in Southeast Asia
DHL Express Thailand has introduced Cactus Export Service to provide next-day delivery of delicate plants like cactuses from Thailand to Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia. Cactuses have become increasingly popular in Southeast Asia. This new service will allow local business owners to capture the opportunities of this increasing demand and expand their reach across the region.
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LIBERIA: What’s Really Behind the Import Permit Declaration (IPDs) Quagmire
LIBERIA: What’s Really Behind the Import Permit Declaration (IPDs) Quagmire
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Monrovia – Last month, Commerce and Industry Minister Marwine Diggs sent out a communication to local importers, requesting all to submit import documents for the period; October 2020 to present, for the importation of goods which include but not limited to copies of INF Forms, payment invoices, Bill of Lading, Port charges and all payments related to the clearing of your goods from the free port of Monrovia to the warehouses of businesses.
The communication, in possession of
FrontPageAfrica reportedly became necessary following months of concerns that there was active and illegal practices in existence involving the illicit issuance and/or manipulation of Import Permits Declaration(IPDs) by local manufacturing companies. FrontPageAfrica has however learned that a senior official at the Ministry may have signed a few
TODAY
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The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) Apapa Area Command has intercepted pangolin scales and other mixed endangered species meant for export, worth N952 million.
Comptroller Mohammed Abba-Kura said at a media briefing on Tuesday in Lagos that the items were contained in a one unit 20 feet container with number CSLU 2362640 heading to Haiphong, Vietnam.
He said that the items, falsely declared as furniture component, comprised 162 sacks of pangolin scales weighing 8,800kg and 57 sacks of mixed endangered species of various sizes such as ivory/animal horns, lion bones and others.
Abba-Kura said that the total weight of the items stood at 854,719 tonnes, valued N952 million.