An Act to consolidate and amend the law relating to customs. WHEREAS it is expedient to consolidate and amend the law relating to the levy and collection of customs-duties and to provide for other allied matters; It is hereby enacted as follows:-
(1) This Act may be called the Customs Act, 1969.
(2) It extends to the whole of Bangladesh.
(3) It shall come into force on such date as the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, appoint.
In this Act, unless there is anything repugnant in the subject or context,-
1 (a) “agent” means any person, including a shipping agent, clearing and forwarding agent, cargo agent, 2 and freight forwarding agent, licensed under section 207, or any person permitted to transact any business under section 208; 3 (aa) “Appellate Tribunal” means the Customs, Excise and মূল্য সংযোজন কর Appellate Tribunal constituted under section 196;(j)a Joint Commissioner of Customs or a Director or a Joint Director (Central Intelligence Cell) 36or a Director General (Customs Risk Management Unit);
An officer of Customs appointed under section 3 shall exercise such powers and discharge such duties as are conferred or imposed on him by or under this Act; and he shall also be competent to exercise all powers and discharge all duties conferred or imposed upon any officer subordinate to him:
Provided that, notwithstanding anything contained in this Act or the rules, the Board may, by general or special order, impose such limitations or conditions on the exercise of such powers and discharge of such duties as it thinks fit.
(2) No officer entrusted with any function of an officer of customs under sub-section (1) shall interfere in any manner in the performance of any function by an officer of customs in places notified under section 9.
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law, no officer of the Board or Commissioner of Customs and no other officer of Customs whom the Board or Commissioner of Customs deems it necessary to exempt on grounds of public duty, shall be compelled to serve on 43an inquest.
The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, declare-
The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette-
The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, declare places to be warehousing stations at which alone public warehouses may be appointed and private warehouses may be licensed.
At any warehousing station, the 47Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may, from time to time, appoint public warehouses wherein dutiable goods may be deposited without payment of customs-duty.
(2) The Board may, from time to time, by notification in the official Gazette, impose conditions, limitations or restrictions-
(3) The Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may, suspend or cancel a licence granted under sub-section (1)-
Provided that in case of cancellation of any licence, the licensee shall be served with a show cause notice of thirty days, and be given a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
49 (c) In case of suspension under clause (b), the Business Identification Number (BIN) of the licensee issued under মূল্য সংযোজন কর আইন, ১৯৯১ (১৯৯১ সনের ২২ নং আইন) shall remain suspended till the disposal of the matter.The Commissioner of Customs may, from time to time, appoint, in or near any customs-ports, stations or limits at or within which vessels arriving at or departing from such port shall bring to for the boarding or landing of officers of customs, and may, unless separate provisions therefore have been made under the Ports Act, 1908 (XV of 1908) direct at what particular place in any such port vessels, not brought into port by pilots, shall anchor or moor.
No goods specified in the following clauses shall be brought, whether by air or land or sea, into Bangladesh:-
The Government may, from time to time, by notification in the official Gazette, prohibit or restrict the bringing in to or taking out of Bangladesh of any goods of specified description by air, sea or land.
(3) The regulatory duty levied under sub section (2) shall be in addition to any duty imposed under sub section (1) or under any other law for the time being in force.
(4) Any notification issued under sub section (2) shall, if not earlier rescinded, stand rescinded on the expiry of the financial year in which it was issued.
(5) and (6) [Added by section 5 of অর্থ আইন, ১৯৯৩ (১৯৯৩ সনের ১৮ নং আইন) and subsequently omitted by section 5 of অর্থ আইন, ১৯৯ (১৯৯৫ সনের ১২ নং আইন)
Explanation.- For the purposes of this section, subsidy shall be deemed to exist, if-
(2) The Government may, pending the determination of the amount of subsidy, in accordance with the provisions of this section and the rules made thereunder impose a countervailing duty under this sub-section not exceeding the amount of such subsidy as provisionally estimated by it and if such countervailing duty exceeds the subsidy as so determined,-
(3) Subject to any rules made by the Government, by notification in the official Gazette, the countervailing duty under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) shall not be levied unless it is determined that-
(4) If the Government, is of the opinion that the injury to the domestic industry which is difficult to repair, is caused by massive imports in a relatively short period, of the goods benefiting from subsidies paid or bestowed and where in order to preclude the recurrence of such injury, it is necessary to levy countervailing duty retrospectively, the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, impose countervailing duty from a date prior to the date of imposition of countervailing duty under sub-section (2) but not beyond ninety days from the date of notification under that sub-section and notwithstanding anything contained in any law for the time being in force, such duty shall be payable from the date as specified in the notification issued under this sub-section.
(5) The countervailing duty chargeable under this section shall be in addition to any other duty imposed under this Act or any other law for the time being in force.
(6) The countervailing duty imposed under this section shall unless revoked earlier, cease to have effect on the expiry of five years from the date of such imposition:
Provided that if the Government, in a review, is of the opinion that the cessation of such duty is likely to lead to continuation or recurrence of subsidisation and injury, it may, from time to time, extend the period of such imposition for a further period of five years and such further period shall commence from the date of order of such extension:
Provided further that where a review initiated before the expiry of the aforesaid period of five years has not come to a conclusion before such expiry, the countervailing duty may continue to remain in force pending outcome of such a review for a further period not exceeding one year.
(7) The amount of any subsidy referred to in sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) shall, from time to time, be ascertained and determined by the Government, after such inquiry as it may consider necessary and the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, make rules for the identification of such goods and for the assessment and collection of any countervailing duty imposed upon the importation thereof under this section.
(8) No proceeding for imposition of countervailing duty under this section shall commence unless the Bangladesh Tariff Commission, on receipt of a written application by or on behalf of a domestic industry, informs the Government that there is prima-facie evidence of injury which is caused by direct or indirect subsidy on any particular imported goods.
(1) Where any goods are exported from any country or territory (hereinafter in this section referred to as the exporting country or territory) to Bangladesh at less than the normal value, then, upon the importation of such goods into Bangladesh, the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, impose an anti-dumping duty not exceeding the margin of dumping in relation to such goods.
Explanation.- For the purposes of this section,-
Provided that in the case of import of the goods from a country other than the country of origin and where the goods have been merely transhipped through the country of export or such goods are not produced in the country of export, or there is no comparable price in the country of export, the normal value shall be determined with reference to the price in country of origin.
(2) The Government may, pending the determination of the normal value and the margin of dumping in relation to any goods, in accordance with the provisions of this section and the rules made thereunder, impose on the importation of such goods into Bangladesh an anti-dumping duty on the basis of a provisional estimate of such value and margin and if such anti-dumping duty exceeds the margin as so determined-
(3) if the Government, in respect of the dumped goods under inquiry, is of the opinion that-
(4) The anti-dumping duty chargeable under this section shall be in addition to any other duty imposed under this Act or any other law for the time being in force.
(5) The anti-dumping duty imposed under this section shall, unless revoked earlier, cease to have effect on the expiry of five years from the date of such imposition:
Provided that if the Government, in a review, is of the opinion that the cessation of such duty is likely to lead to continuation or recurrence of dumping and injury, it may, from time to time, extend the period of such imposition for a further period of five years and such further period shall commence from the date of order of such extension:
Provided further that where a review initiated before the expiry of the aforesaid period of five years has not come to a conclusion before such expiry, the anti-dumping duty may continue to remain in force pending the outcome of such a review for a further period not exceeding one year.
(6) The margin of dumping as referred to in sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) shall, from time to time, as ascertained and determined by the Government after such inquiry as it may consider necessary and the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, make rules for the purposes of this section and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, such rules may provide for the manner in which goods liable for any anti-dumping duty under this section may be identified and for the manner in which the export price and the normal value of and the margin of dumping in relation to such goods may be determined and for the assessment and collection of such anti-dumping duty.
(7) No proceeding for imposition of anti-dumping duty under this section shall commence unless the Bangladesh Tariff Commission, on receipt of a written application by or on behalf of a domestic industry, informs the Government that there is prima-facie evidence of injury which is caused by dumping on any particular imported goods.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in section 18A or section 18B-
Provided that nothing contained in sub-clauses (ii) and (iii) of clause (b) shall apply if a countervailing duty or an anti-dumping duty has been imposed on any goods to prevent injury or threat of an injury to the domestic industry of a third country exporting the like goods to Bangladesh;
(2) The Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, make rules for the purposes of this section, and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, such rules may provide for the manner in which any investigation may be made for the purposes of this section, the factors to which regard shall be paid in any such investigation and for all matters connected with such investigation.
(1) An appeal against the order of determination or review thereof regarding the existence, degree and effect of any subsidy or dumping in relation to import of any goods shall lie to the Customs, Excise and মূল্য সংযোজন কর Appellate Tribunal constituted under section 196.
(2) Every appeal under this section shall be filed within ninety days of the date of order under appeal:
Provided that the Appellate Tribunal may entertain any appeal after the expiry of the said period of ninety days, if it is satisfied that the appellant was prevented by sufficient cause from filing the appeal in time.
(3) The Appellate Tribunal may, after giving the parties to the appeal, an opportunity of being heard, pass such orders thereon as it thinks fit, confirming, modifying or annulling the order appealed against.
(4) Every appeal under sub-section (1) shall be heard by a special Bench constituted by the President of the Appellate Tribunal for hearing such appeals and such Bench shall consist of the President and not less than two members and shall include one technical member and one judicial member.]
Provided that the Government, may, by notification in the official Gazette, exempt any goods from the whole or any part of safeguard duty leviable thereon, subject to such conditions, limitations or restrictions as it thinks fit to impose.
(2) The Government may, pending the determination under sub-section (1) of the injury or threat thereof, impose a provisional safeguard duty on the basis of a preliminary determination in the prescribed manner that increased imports have caused or threatened to cause serious injury to a domestic industry:
Provided that where, on final determination, the Government is of the opinion that increased imports have not caused or threatened to cause serious injury to a domestic industry, it shall refund the duty so collected:
Provided further that the provisional safeguard duty shall not remain in force for more than two hundred days from the date on which it was imposed.
(3) The duty chargeable under this section shall be in addition to any other duty imposed under this Act or under any other law for the time being in force.
(4) The duty imposed under this section shall, unless revoked earlier, cease to have effect on the expiry of four years from the date of such imposition:
Provided that if the Government is of the opinion that the domestic industry has taken measures to adjust to such injury or threat thereof and it is necessary that the safeguard duty should continue to be imposed, it may extend the period of such imposition:
Provided further that in no case the safeguard duty shall continue to be imposed beyond a period of ten years from the date on which such duty was first imposed.
(5) The Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, make rules for the purposes of this section, and without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, such rules may provide for the manner in which articles liable for safeguard duty may be identified and for the manner in which the causes of serious injury or causes of threat of serious injury in relation to such articles may be determined and for the assessment and collection of such safeguard duty.
(6) For the purposes of this section,-
Provided that if, in a financial year, exemption under this sub-section is given in respect of any goods, the rate of duty cannot be changed more than once in that year so as to increase that rate.
77(2) An exemption granted under sub-section (1) shall be effective from the date mentioned in the notification issued under that sub-section.Subject to such conditions, limitations or restrictions, as it thinks fit to impose, the Board 81or any other authority authorised by the Board in writing in this behalf may, in such general cases as may be prescribed by rules or in particular cases by special order, authorise-
If goods produced or manufactured in and exported from Bangladesh are subsequently imported into Bangladesh, such goods shall be liable to customs-duty and be subject to all the conditions and restrictions, if any, to which goods of the like kind and value not so produced or manufactured are liable on the importation thereof:
Provided if such goods have been imported within two years of their exportation 82* and have not undergone any processing since their exportation, the appropriate officer not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of Customs may admit the goods-
83(a) where at the time of exportation of such goods, drawback was allowed, on payment of the amount of such drawback;on payment of customs-duty equal to the aggregate amount of all such duties and taxes calculated at the rates prevailing at the time and place of importation of goods; or
84(c) in any other case, without payment of customs-duty.All goods, derelict, jetsam, flotsam and wreck, brought or coming into Bangladesh, shall be dealt with as if they were imported into Bangladesh.
Goods produced or manufactured in Bangladesh and required as provisions and stores on any conveyance proceeding to any foreign port, airport or station may be exported free of customs-duty, 85 and Value Added Tax (মূল্য সংযোজন কর ) in such quantities as the appropriate officer may determine having regard to the size of the conveyance, the number of passengers and crew and the length of the voyage or journey on which the conveyance is about to depart.
(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (1), the price referred to in that sub-section in respect of imported goods shall be determined in accordance with the rules made in this behalf.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in this section, the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, fix, for the purpose of levying customs duties, tariff values 92or minimum values for any goods imported or exported as chargeable with customs-duty ad valorem:
Provided that any imported or exported goods, the declared value of which is higher than its tariff value fixed under this sub-section, shall be chargeable with customs duties on the basis of its declared value.
93(4) The average rate of exchange prevailing during the thirty days preceding the last working day of the third week of the month preceding the month during which the bill of entry or the bill of export is delivered under sections 79 or 131 or electronically transmitted to the Customs computer system shall be the rate of exchange for the computation of the value of any imported or exported goods and such rate shall be fixed by the Board or by such officer as the Board may authorise in this behalf.(5) For the purpose of this section 94 *-
(3) For the purposes of this section, “price” means value of the goods determined in accordance with sub-sections (1) and (2) of section 25.
The Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, impose pre-shipment inspection service charge on imported goods required to be inspected by pre-shipment inspection agencies at a rate not exceeding one per cent of the value of such goods and this charge shall be collected as if it were a customs-duty leviable under section 18(1).]
(2) In addition to the requirements of sub-section (1) of this section, an officer of Customs not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner may require the owner or importer or exporter of those goods, or agent thereof, as the case may be, as and 102when necessary, to-
An officer of Customs not below the rank of Joint Commissioner may, by notice in writing, require any person (including any officer employed in or in connection with any Government department, Corporation, or local authority, or any officer employed in or in connection with any bank 105 , operator as defined in section 2(19) of বাংলাদেশ টেলিযোগাযোগ নিয়ন্ত্রণ আইন, ২০০১ or any statutory authority, as and when required to-
(1) A Customs officer may take possession of and retain any document or record presented in connection with any entry or required to be produced under this Act.
(2) Where the Customs officer takes possession of a document or record under sub-section (1) of this section, the said officer shall, at the request of the person otherwise entitled to the document or record, provide that person with a copy of the document certified by him or on his behalf under the seal of the Customs as a true copy.
(3) Every copy so certified shall be admissible as evidence in all Courts as if it were the original.
(1) Where an officer of Customs or an authorised person carries out any lawful search, inspection, audit, or examination under this Act, and has reasonable cause to believe that documents coming into his possession during such search, inspection, audit, or examination are evidence of the commission of an offence under this Act, he may remove the documents for the purpose of making copies.
(2) The documents or records so removed must, as soon as practicable after copies thereof have been made, be returned to the person otherwise entitled to them.
(3) A copy of any such document certified by or on behalf of the officer of Customs under the seal of the Customs shall be admissible in evidence in all Courts as if it were the original.
(1) Where an officer of Customs or an authorised person carries out any lawful search, inspection, audit, or examination under this Act, and has reasonable cause to believe that any document or goods coming into his possession during such search, inspection, audit, or examination are evidence of the commission of an offence under this Act, or are intended to be used for the purpose of committing any offence under this Act, the officer or his authorised person may take possession of and retain the documents or goods, as the case may be.
(2) Where an officer of Customs or his authorised person takes possession of a document under sub-section (1) of this section, he shall, at the request of the person otherwise entitled to the document, provide that person with a copy of the document certified by or on behalf of the Customs officer under the seal of the Customs as a true copy.
(3) Every copy so certified shall be admissible in evidence in Courts as if it were the original.]
the value of such goods shall, on a written application made by the owner of the goods, be appraised by an appropriate officer of Customs, and the owner shall be allowed abatement of duty in proportion to the diminution in value of the goods as so appraised.
(2) Where it is shown, in writing by the owner of any imported goods to the satisfaction of the Commissioner of Customs that the goods have been 110damaged, deteriorated, lost or destroyed by an accident or force majeure, after importation but before clearance thereof for home consumption, the Commissioner of Customs may, on an application made by the owner, furnishing all particulars necessary to establish the fact of such 111damage, deterioration, loss or destruction, remit or repay any duty chargeable or paid on such goods.
Explanation.- For the purpose of this sub-section, “force majeure” means an act of God.
112(3) Where it is shown to the satisfaction of the Commissioner of Customs that any warehoused goods had been damaged at any time before clearance for home-consumption by an accident or force majeure, the Commissioner of Customs may, on an application from the owner of the goods furnishing all particulars necessary to establish the fact of such damage, allow the value of such goods to be appraised by an appropriate officer of Customs and the owner of the goods shall be allowed abatement of duty in proportion to the diminution in value of the goods as so appraised.When by any law for the time being in force a duty lower than that prescribed by 113this Act, is imposed on denatured spirit, any such spirit imported into Bangladesh may, subject to rules, be tested and if necessary adequately denatured by officers of customs, at the expense of the person importing the same, before the customs-duty is charged thereon.
Except as provided in section 88, no amendment of a bill of entry or bill of export relating to goods assessed for duty on the declared value, quantity or description thereof shall be allowed after such goods have been removed from the customs-area.
Provided that where the export of any goods is permitted without a bill of export or in anticipation of the delivery of such a bill, the rate of duty applicable to, and the rate of exchange for the computation of the value of, such goods shall be the rate of duty or, as the case may be, the rate of exchange applicable on the date on which loading of the goods on the outgoing conveyance commences.
(1) If any person, in connection with any matter of customs,-
and such document or statement is untrue in any material particular, he shall be guilty of an offence under this section.
(2) Where, by reason of any such document or statement as aforesaid or by reason of some collusion, any duty or charge has not been levied or has been short-levied or has been erroneously refunded, the person liable to pay any amount on that account shall be served with a notice 122* requiring him to show cause why he should not pay the amount specified in the notice.
(3) Where, by reason of any inadvertence, error or misconstruction, any duty or charge 123amounting to not less than one thousand Taka has not been levied or has been short-levied or has been erroneously refunded, the person liable to pay any amount on that account shall be served with a notice within 124five years of the relevant date requiring him to show cause why he should not pay the amount specified in the notice.
(4) The appropriate officer, after considering the representation, if any, of such person as is referred to in sub-section (2) of sub-section (3) shall determine the amount of duty payable by him which shall in no case exceed the amount specified in the notice, and such person shall pay the amount so determined 125:
Provided that where the amount so determined is less than one thousand Taka, the person concerned shall not be required to make the payment.
(5) For the purposes of this section, the expression “relevant date” means-
(1) No refund of any customs-duties or charges claimed to have been paid or over-paid through inadvertence, 127error, misconstruction or in any other way shall be allowed, unless such claim is made within 128six months of the date of payment 129:
Provided that where the amount so claimed is less than one thousand Taka, refund shall not be allowed.
(2) In the case of provisional payments made under section 8l, the said period of 130six months shall be reckoned from the date of the adjustment of duty after its final assessment.
An officer of Customs, not below the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Customs may, in the case of any mercantile firm or public body, if he so thinks fit, instead of requiring payment of customs-duties or charges as and when they become due, keep with such firm or body an account-current of such duties and charges, which account shall be settled at intervals of not exceeding one month, and such firm or body shall make a deposit or furnish a security sufficient in the opinion of that officer to cover the amount which may at any time be payable by it in respect of such duties or charges.
Subject to the subsequent provisions of this Chapter and the rules, when any goods, capable of being easily identified, which have been imported into Bangladesh and upon which customs-duties have been paid on importation, are exported to any place outside Bangladesh or as provisions or stores for use on board a conveyance proceeding to a foreign territory, 131such duties, not exceeding seven-eighths thereof, shall be repaid as drawback, subject to the following conditions, namely:-
(1) the goods are identified to the satisfaction of an officer of Customs not below the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Customs at the customs-station, to be the same as had been imported, and
(2) the goods are entered for export within two years of the date of their importation, as shown by the records of the custom-house or if such time is extended by the Board or the Commissioner of Customs for sufficient cause within such extended time:
Provided that the Commissioner of Customs shall not extend the time beyond three years of the importation of such goods.
Explanation.- For the purposes of this section, the goods shall be deemed to have been entered for export on the date on which the bill of export is delivered to the appropriate officer under section 131.
Notwithstanding anything contained in section 35, the repayment of duty as drawback in respect of goods which have been taken into use between their importation and subsequent exportation shall be made in accordance with the provisions of the rules made in that behalf.
Where it appears to the Board that in respect of goods of any class or description manufactured in Bangladesh and exported to any place outside Bangladesh, a drawback of customs-duties should be allowed on any imported goods of a class or description used in the manufacture of such exported goods, the Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, direct that drawback shall be allowed in respect of such imported goods to such extent and subject to such condition as may be provided in the rules.
(1) The Board may, from time to time, by notification in the official Gazette, declare what goods shall, for the purposes of this Chapter, be deemed to be not capable of being easily identified.
(2) The Government may, from time to time, by notification in the official Gazette, prohibit the payment of drawback upon the exportation of goods or any specified goods or class of goods to any specified foreign port or territory.
Notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, no drawback shall be allowed-
No such payment of drawback shall be made until the vessel carrying the goods has put out to sea or other conveyance has left Bangladesh.
Every person, or his duly authorised agent, claiming drawback on any goods duly exported shall make and subscribe a declaration that such goods have been actually exported and have not been re-landed and are not intended to be re-landed at any place in Bangladesh and that such person was at the time of entry outwards and export and continues to be entitled to drawback thereon.
(1) The person-in-charge of a conveyance entering Bangladesh from any place outside Bangladesh shall not cause or permit the conveyance to call or to land in the first instance at any place other than a customs-station.
(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall not apply in relation to any conveyance which is compelled by accident, stress of weather or other unavoidable cause to call or land at a place other than a customs-station but the person-in-charge of any such conveyance-
Provided that nothing in this section shall prohibit the departure of any passenger or member of the crew from the vicinity of, or the removal of goods from, the conveyance where such departure or removal is necessary for reasons of health, safety or the preservation of life or property.
(1) The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, fix a place in any river or port beyond which no vessel arriving shall pass until an import manifest has been delivered to the pilot, 133officer of Customs, or other person duly authorised to receive the same, or as the case may be, until the manifest has been transmitted to the Customs computer system by a registered user.
(2) If in any river or port wherein a place has been fixed by the Board under this section, the master of any vessel arriving remains outside or below the place so fixed, such master shall, nevertheless, within twenty-four hours after the vessel anchors, deliver an import manifest to the pilot, officer of Customs or other person duly authorised to receive the same.
(3) If any vessel arrives at any customs-port in which a place has not been so fixed, the master of such vessel shall, within twenty-four hours after such vessel has anchored within the limits of the port, deliver an import manifest to the pilot, officer of Customs or other person authorised to receive the same 134:
Provided that if an officer not below the rank of 135Revenue Officer is satisfied that the master of the vessel was prevented by circumstances beyond his control from delivering the import manifest within twenty-four hours after the vessel anchored outside or below the place fixed by the Board under sub-section (1), allow it to be delivered within a further period of twenty-four hours or immediately after the first lighter vessel takes berth, whichever is earlier.
(4) Notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, the appropriate officer may allow an import manifest to be delivered in anticipation of the arrival of a vessel.
136(5) The Board may, by notification in the official gazette, specify the procedures for submitting a complete electronic import manifest by the master of the vessel or his authorized agent prior to the departure of the vessel from the last port of call.The person-in-charge of a conveyance other than a vessel shall, within twenty-four hours after arrival thereof at a land customs-airport or customs-stations, as the case may be, deliver an import manifest to the appropriate officer 137or if the person-in-charge is a registered user, he may transmit the manifest to the Customs computer system138:
139Provided that the Board may, by notification in the official gazette, specify the procedures for submitting complete electronic cargo, advance passenger manifest and crew information by the person-in-charge of an aircraft or his authorized agent prior to the departure of the aircraft from the last port of call.(1) Every manifest delivered under section 43 or section 44 shall be signed by the person-in-charge of the conveyance or his duly authorised agent and shall specify all goods imported in such conveyance showing separately all goods, if any, intended to be landed, transhipped, transited or taken on to another customs-station or to a destination outside Bangladesh and stores intended for consumption at the customs-station or in the outward voyage or journey, and shall be made out in such form and contain such further particulars as the Board may from time to time direct 140:
141Provided that the manifest transmitted to the Customs computer system by a registered user shall be deemed to have been signed by him.(2) The appropriate officer shall permit the person-in-charge of a conveyance or his duly authorised agent to correct any obvious error in the import manifest or to supply any omission which in the opinion of such officer results from accident or inadvertence, by furnishing an amended or supplementary import manifest and shall levy thereon such fees as the Board from time to time directs.
142(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (2), the Board may specify, by special Order, the manner, conditions, limitations or restrictions under which the appropriate officer shall permit, the person-in-charge of a conveyance, or his duly authorised agent, to submit an amended or supplementary import manifest in special circumstances and shall levy thereon such fees as the Board may direct.The person receiving an import manifest under section 43 or section 44 shall countersign the same and enter thereon such particulars as the Commissioner of Customs from time to time directs 143, and where the import manifest is transmitted electronically to the Customs computer system by a registered user, the import manifest shall be deemed to have been countersigned by the person authorised to receive such transmission and that person shall comply with the direction of that Commissioner, if any, in this regard.
No vessel arriving in any customs-port shall be allowed to break bulk, until an import manifest has been delivered as hereinbefore provided or until a copy of such manifest, together with an application for entry of such vessel inwards, has been presented by the master to the appropriate officer and an order has been given thereon for such entry.
(1) When an import manifest is presented, the person-in-charge of a conveyance or his duly authorised agent, if required so to do by the appropriate officer, shall deliver to the officer the bill of lading or the bill of freight or a copy thereof for every part of cargo or goods laden on board, journey log-book and any port clearance, docket or other paper granted in respect of such conveyance at the place from which it is stated to have come, and shall answer all such questions relating to the conveyance, goods, crew 144, passengers and voyage or journey as are put to him by such officer.
(2) The appropriate officer may, if any requisition or question made or put by him under this section is not complied with or answered, refuse to grant permission to a vessel to break bulk and to other conveyance to land the imported goods, as the case may be.
Notwithstanding anything contained in section 47 and subject to rules, the appropriate officer may grant, prior to receipt of the import manifest and the entry inwards of a vessel, a special pass permitting bulk to be broken.
(1) No goods other than passengers' baggage and mail bags shall be loaded on a conveyance until-
(2) Every application made under this section shall specify the particulars as prescribed by the Board.
(1) No vessel, whether laden or in ballast, shall depart from any customs-port until a port-clearance has been granted by the appropriate officer.
(2) No pilot shall take charge of any vessel proceeding to sea, unless the master of such vessel produces a port-clearance.
No conveyance other than a vessel shall depart from a land customs-station or customs-airport until a written permission to that effect has been granted by the appropriate officer.
(1) Every application for port-clearance shall be made by the master of a vessel at least twenty-four hours before the intended departure of the vessel:
Provided that the 145Commissioner of Customs or an officer authorised by him in this behalf may for special reasons to be recorded allow a shorter period for the delivery of the said application. 146:
147Provided further that when the master is a registered user, he may make the application under this sub-section by transmitting it to the Customs computer system, and an application so transmitted shall be deemed to have been duly signed by him..(2) The master shall, at the time of applying for port-clearance,-
Provided that if the master is a registered user, he may transmit to the Customs computer system the export manifest and other documents specified at clauses (b) and (c) and the documents so transmitted shall be deemed to have been signed by him for the purposes of this section.
(3) The provisions of section 45, relating to the amendment of import manifests shall, mutatis mutandis, apply also to export manifest delivered under this section or under section 54.
The person-in-charge of a conveyance other than a vessel or his duly authorised agent shall-
(1) The appropriate officer may refuse to give port-clearance to a vessel or permission for departure to any other conveyance until-
(2) An agent delivering a declaration under clause (d) of sub-section (1) shall be liable to all penalties which might be imposed on the person-in-charge of such conveyance under clause 24 of the Table under sub-section (1) of section 156 and an agent delivering a declaration under clause (e) of sub-section (1) shall be bound to discharge all claims referred to in such declaration.
When the appropriate officer is satisfied that the provisions of this Chapter relating to the departure of conveyances have been duly complied with, he shall grant a port-clearance to the master of the vessel or a written permission for departure to the person-in-charge of any other conveyance and shall return at the same time to such master or person-in-charge one copy of the manifest duly countersigned by the appropriate officer.
Notwithstanding anything contained in section 55 or section 56 and subject to rules, the appropriate officer may grant a port-clearance in respect of a vessel or permission for departure in respect of any other conveyance, if the agent furnishes such security as such officer deems sufficient for duly delivering within ten days from the date of such grant, the export manifest and other documents specified in section 53 or section 54, as the case may be.
(1) For the purpose of securing compliance with any provision of this Act or the rules or any other law, the appropriate officer may at any time, while the vessel is within the limits of any port or any other conveyance is within the limits of any station or airport or within Bangladesh territory, demand the return of port-clearance or the written permission for departure, as the case may be.
(2) Any such demand may be made in writing or may be communicated to the person-in-charge of the conveyance by wireless, and if made in writing it may be served-
(3) Where a demand for the return of a port-clearance or of a permission for departure is made as aforesaid, the port-clearance or permission shall forthwith become void.
(1) The provisions of sections 44, 52 and 54 shall not apply to a conveyance other than a vessel which carries no goods other than the baggage of its occupants.
(2) The Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, exempt conveyances belonging to Government or any foreign Government from all or any of the provisions of this Chapter.
At any time while a conveyance is in a customs-station or is proceeding towards such station, the appropriate officer may depute one or more officers of Customs to board the conveyance, and every officer so deputed shall remain on board such conveyance for such time as the appropriate officer may consider necessary.
Whenever an officer of Customs is so deputed to be on board any conveyance, the person-in-charge shall be bound to receive him on board and to provide him with suitable accommodation and adequate quantity of fresh water.
(1) Every officer deputed as aforesaid shall have free access to every part of the conveyance and may-
(2) If any box, place or closed receptacle in any such conveyance be locked, and the key be withheld, such officer shall export the same to the appropriate officer, who may thereupon issue to the officer on board the conveyance or to any other officer under his authority, a written order for search.
(3) On production of such order, the officer empowered thereunder may require that any such box, place or closed receptacle be opened in his presence; and if it be not opened upon his requisition, he may break open the same.
Conveyances carrying transit goods for destinations outside Bangladesh or goods from some foreign territory to a customs-station or from a customs-station to some foreign territory may be sealed in such cases and in such manner as may be provided in the rules.
Save where general permission is given under section 67 or with permission in writing of the appropriate officer, no goods other than passengers' baggage or ballast urgently required to be loaded for the vessel's safety, shall be shipped or water-borne to be shipped or discharged from any vessel, in any customs-port, nor any goods except passengers' baggage shall be loaded in or unloaded from any conveyance other than a vessel at any land customs-station or customs-airport except in the presence of an officer of Customs.
Except with the permission in writing of the appropriate officer and on payment of such fees as may be prescribed by the Board no goods, other than passenger baggage or mail bags, shall in any customs-port be discharged, or be shipped or water-borne to be shipped or shall be loaded or unloaded or passed at any land customs-station or customs-airport-
Save where general permission is given under section 67 or with permission in writing of the appropriate officer, no imported goods shall be unloaded or goods for export loaded at any place other than a place duly approved under clause (b) of section 10 for the unloading or loading of such goods.
Notwithstanding anything contained in section 64 or section 66, the Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, give general permission for goods to be loaded at any customs-station from any place not duly appointed for loading and without the presence or authority of an officer of Customs.
(1) When any goods are water-borne for the purpose of being landed from any vessel and warehoused or cleared for home-consumption, or of being shipped for exportation on board any vessel, there shall be sent, with each boat-load or other separate despatch, a boat-note specifying the number of packages so sent and the marks or number or other description thereof.
(2) Each boat-note for goods to be landed shall be signed by an officer of the vessel, and likewise by the officer of Customs on board, if any such officer be on board, and shall be delivered on arrival to any officer of Customs authorised to receive the same.
(3) Each boat-note for goods to be shipped shall be signed by the appropriate officer and, if an officer of Customs is on board the vessel on which such goods are to be shipped, shall be delivered to such officer, and if no such officer be on board, shall be delivered to the master of the vessel or to an officer of the vessel appointed by him to receive it.
(4) The officer of Customs who receives any boat-note of goods landed, and the officer of Customs, master or other officer as the case may be, who receives any boat-note of goods shipped, shall sign the same and note thereon such particulars as the Commissioner of Customs may from time to time direct.
(5) The Board may from time to time, by notification in the official Gazette, suspend the operation of this section in any customs-port or part thereof.
All goods water-borne for the purpose of being landed or shipped shall be landed or shipped without any unnecessary delay.
Except in cases of imminent danger, no goods discharged into or loaded in any boat for the purpose of being landed or shipped shall be transhipped into any other boat without the permission of an officer of Customs.
(1) The Board may declare with regard to any customs-port, by notification in the official Gazette, that, after a date therein specified, no boat not duly licensed and registered shall be allowed to ply as a cargo-boat for the landing and shipping of merchandise within the limits of such port.
(2) In any port with regard to which such notification has been issued, the Commissioner of Customs or other officer whom the Board appoints in this behalf, may, subject to rules and on payment of such fees as the Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, prescribe, issue licences for and register cargo-boats, or cancel the same.
(1) Every boat belonging to a 150Bangladeshi ship and every other vessel not exceeding one hundred tons, shall be marked in such manner as may be prescribed by rules.
(2) Plying of all or any class or description of vessels of less than one hundred tons, whether in sea or inland waters, may be prohibited or regulated or restricted as to the purposes and limits of plying by rules.
When an order for entry inwards of any vessel which has arrived in any customs-port or a special pass permitting such vessel to break bulk has been given, discharge of the cargo of such vessel may be proceeded with.
When on arrival of a conveyance other than a vessel at a land customs-station or customs-airport the person-in-charge of such conveyance has delivered the import manifest under section 44 and the documents required under section 48, he shall forthwith take the conveyance or cause it to be taken to the examination station at the land customs-station or customs-airport and remove or cause to be removed all goods carried in such conveyance to the custom-house in the presence of the appropriate officer or some person duly authorised by him in that behalf.
(1) No imported goods required to be shown in the import manifest shall, except with the permission of the appropriate officer, be unloaded from any conveyance at any customs-station unless they are specified in the import manifest or amended or supplementary import manifest for being unloaded at that customs-station.
(2) Nothing in this section shall apply to the unloading of the baggage accompanying a passenger or a member or a crew or mail bags.
(1) (a) If any goods imported by a vessel (except such as have been shown in the import manifest as not to be unloaded) are not unloaded within such period as is specified in the bill of lading or if no period is so specified, within such number of the working days, not exceeding fifteen, after entry of the vessel as the Board may from time to time by notification in the official Gazette appoint, or
appropriate officer that goods are to remain subject to a lien for freight, primage, general average, demurrage, container detention charges, dead-freight, terminal handling charges, container service charge or other charges of a stated amount, the appropriate officer shall hold such goods until he receives notice in writing that the said charges have been paid.
(1) At any time after the arrival of any vessel, the appropriate officer may, with the consent of the master of such vessel, cause any small package or parcel of goods to be carried to the custom-house there to remain for entry in charge of the officers of customs, during the remainder of the working days allowed under this Act for the landing of such package or parcel.
(2) In any package or parcel so carried to the custom-house remains unclaimed on the expiration of the number of working days so allowed for its unloading, or at the time of the clearance outwards of the vessel from which it was unloaded, the master of such vessel may give such notice as is provided in section 76, and the officer-in-charge of the custom-house shall thereupon hold such package or parcel as provided in that section.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in sections 74, 76 and 77, the appropriate officer in any customs-station to which the Board, by notification in the official Gazette, declares this section to apply, may permit the master of any vessel immediately on receipt of an order under section 47 or a special pass under section 49, or the person-in-charge of a conveyance other than a vessel on receipt of the import manifest to discharge the goods imported by such conveyance, or any portion thereof, into the custody of his agent, if he be willing to receive the same, for the purpose of unloading the same forthwith-
(2) Any agent so receiving such cargo or portion shall be bound to discharge all claims for damage or short delivery which may be established in respect of the same by the owner thereof, and shall be entitled to recover from such owner his charges for service rendered, but not for commission or the like, where any agent for the unloading of such cargo or portion has been previously appointed by the owner and such appointment is un-revoked 152:
Provided that no agent so receiving such cargo or portion shall cause it to be removed or otherwise dealt with except in accordance with the written order of the appropriate officer.
(3) The appropriate officer shall take charge of all goods discharged under clause (a) of sub-section (1) and otherwise proceed in relation thereto as provided in sections 76 and 82.
(4) 153A public body or company or port authority or airlines or person at whose landing-place or wharf or place of storage any goods are discharged under clause (b) or clause (c) of sub-section (1) shall not permit the same to be removed or otherwise dealt with except in accordance with the order in writing of the appropriate officer.
(1) The owner of any imported goods shall make entry of such goods for home-consumption or warehousing or for any other approved purpose by delivering to the appropriate officer a bill of entry thereof in such form and manner and containing such particulars as the Board may direct:
Provided that, if the owner makes and subscribes a declaration before the appropriate officer to the effect that he is unable, for want of 154such information as is essential for submitting a bill of entry, then the said officer shall permit him, previous to the entry thereof, to examine the goods in the presence of an officer of Customs or to deposit such goods in a public warehouse appointed under section 12 without warehousing the same, pending the production of such information.
155(1A) The Commissioner of Customs may within the period specified in sub-section (2) require the owner who has delivered or transmitted a bill of entry in electronic form to submit to the appropriate officer a paper bill of entry duly signed by the owner or his authorised agent, containing such information and documents as the said Commissioner may specify. 156(1B) A bill of entry under sub-section (1) shall be delivered within five working days since the arrival of goods:Provided that the Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, extend such time upon stipulating such conditions or limitations as it deems fit and proper.
157(2) A bill of entry under sub-section (1) may be presented and the goods be cleared at any time within 158thirty days of the date of unloading thereof at a customs-port or a land customs-station or customs-inland container depot or 159within twenty one days of the date of unloading thereof at a customs-airport or within such extended period as the Commissioner of Customs may deem fit: 160Provided that the Commissioner of Customs may permit a bill of entry to be presented even before the delivery of the manifest if the vessel or the aircraft by which the goods have been shipped for importation into Bangladesh is expected to arrive within thirty days from the date of such presentation.(3) If the Commissioner of Customs is satisfied that the rate of customs-duty is not adversely affected and that there was no intention to defraud, he may in exceptional circumstances and for reasons to be recorded in writing permit substitution of a bill of entry for home-consumption for a bill of entry for warehousing or vice versa.
(1) A person who wishes to be registered as a user of a 165Customs computer system may apply in writing to the Commissioner of Customs in the prescribed form and shall provide such information in relation to the application as required by the Commissioner.
(2) The said Commissioner may require an applicant for registration to give such additional information as the said Commissioner considers necessary for the purpose of the application.
(3) The said Commissioner may-
(4) The said Commissioner shall give notice in writing to the applicant of his decision.
(1) A person who is registered as a user of a 166Customs computer system shall be allocated a unique user identifier for use in relation to that 167Customs computer system by the Commissioner of Customs, in such form or of such a nature as the Commissioner of Customs may determine.
(2) The unique user identifier allocated pursuant to sub-section (1) of this section shall be used by the registered user for the purpose of transmitting information to or receiving information from that 168Customs computer system.
(3) The Commissioner of Customs may, by notice in writing, impose conditions and limitations on a particular registered user, or on registered users generally, relating to the use and security of unique user identifiers.
(1) Where information is transmitted to a 169Customs computer system using a unique user identifier issued to a registered user by the Commissioner of Customs for that purpose, the transmission of that information shall, in the absence of proof to the contrary, be sufficient evidence that the registered user to whom the unique user identifier has been issued has transmitted that information.
(2) Where a unique user identifier is used by an individual who is not entitled to use it, sub-section (1) of this section does not apply if the registered user to whom the unique user identifier was issued has, prior to the unauthorised use of the unique user identifier, notified the Commissioner of Customs in writing that the unique user identifier is no longer secure.
(1) Where at any time the Commissioner of Customs having jurisdiction is satisfied that a person who is a registered user of a 170Customs computer system has-
the said Commissioner may cancel the registration of that individual as a registered user by giving notice in writing to that person setting out the reasons for the cancellation.
(1) The Customs must keep a record of every transmission sent to or received from a registered user using a 172Customs computer system.
(2) The record described in sub-section (1) of this section must be kept for a period of five years from the date of the sending of or the receipt of the transmission, or for such other period as may be prescribed.]
(1) On the delivery 173or electronic transmission of such bill, the goods or such part thereof as may be necessary may, without undue delay, be examined or tested 174in the presence of the owner or his agent, unless due to any exceptional circumstance such presence cannot be allowed and thereafter the goods shall be assessed to duty, if any, and the owner of such goods may then proceed to clear the same for home-consumption or warehouse them, subject to the provisions hereinafter contained.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), imported goods prior to examination or testing thereof may be permitted by the appropriate officer to be assessed to duty on the basis of the statements made in the bill relating thereto and the information furnished under the rules and the documents produced under section 26; but if it is found subsequently on examination or testing of the goods or otherwise that any statement in such bill or document or any information so furnished is not correct in respect of any matter relating to the assessment, the goods shall, without prejudice to any other action which may be taken under this Act, be re-assessed to duty.
175(3) Subject to the guidelines, if any, given by the Board from time to time, the Commissioner of Customs or any other Customs officer authorised by him in this behalf may clear any goods or class of goods imported by an importer or a class of importers without examination and testing of the goods, wholly or partly under sub-section (1).(4) Upon delivery or transmission of the bill of entry for the goods cleared or to be cleared under sub-section (3) the duty shall be deemed to have been duly assessed for the purposes of this section:
Provided that where the appropriate officer has reason to believe that in case of any bill of entry re-assessment is necessary, he may, by recording reasons in writing re-assess the duty payable for the goods and take such other actions as he may deem fit under this Act.
(1) Where it is not possible immediately to assess the customs-duty that may be payable on any imported goods entered for home-consumption or for warehousing or for clearance from a warehouse for home-consumption or on any goods entered for exportation, for the reason that the goods require chemical or other test or a further enquiry for purposes of assessment, or that all the documents or complete documents or full information pertaining to those goods have not been furnished, an officer not below the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Customs may order that the duty payable on such goods be assessed provisionally:
Provided that the importer (save in the case of goods entered for warehousing) or the exporter pays such additional amount as security or furnishes such guarantee of a scheduled bank for the payment thereof as the said officer deems sufficient to meet the excess of the final assessment of duty over the provisional assessment.
176(2) Where any goods are allowed to be cleared or delivered on the basis of such provisional assessment, the amount of duty actually payable on those goods shall, within a period of one hundred and twenty working days from the date of the provisional assessment, where there is a case pending at any court, tribunal or appellate authority, from the date of receipt of the final disposal order of that case, be finally assessed and on completion of such assessment the appropriate officer shall order that the amount already guaranteed be adjusted against the amount payable on the basis of final assessment, and the difference between them shall be paid forthwith to or by the importer or exporter as the case may be:Provided that the Board may, under exceptional circumstances recorded in writing, extend the period of final assessment specified under this sub-section.
Provided that-
Provided further that nothing in this section shall authorise removal for home consumption of any dutiable goods without payment of customs-duties thereon.
182(2) Where any goods are sold under sub-section (1) pending adjudication, appeal, revision or decision of a Court, the proceeds of such sale shall be deposited into the Government treasury; and, if on such adjudication or in such appeal or revision it is found or if the Court finds that the goods so sold are not liable to confiscation, the proceeds of the sale shall, after necessary deduction of duties, taxes or dues as provided in section 201, be refunded to the owner.Explanation.- For the purpose of this section “detained goods” include goods detained for chemical examination, radiation test, and reference for resolution disputes on of classification, value, ITC aspect or any other legal disputes.
(2) If the amendment has the effect of imposing a fresh liability or enhancing an existing liability, a demand notice in writing shall be given by the officer of Customs to the person liable for the duty.
(3) Unless otherwise specified in this Act, the due date for payment against the aforesaid demand notice shall be thirty working days from the date of issue of such a written demand notice by the officer of Customs.
(1) Where an assessment of duty has been made under this Act, the officer of Customs is not entitled to increase the amount of the assessment after the expiration of three years from the date on which the original assessment was made.
(2) Notwithstanding sub-section (1) of this section, in any case where the entry or any declaration made in relation to the goods was fraudulent or wilfully misleading, the officer of Customs may amend the assessment at any time 188* so as to increase the amount of the assessment.
(1) An officer of Customs may at any time enter any premises or place where records are kept pursuant to section 211 of this Act and audit and examine those records either in relation to specific transactions or to the adequacy or integrity of the manual or electronic system or systems by which such records are created and stored.
(2) For the purposes of sub-section (1) of this section, an officer of Customs shall have full and free access to all lands, buildings and places and to all books, records and documents, whether in the custody or under the control of the licensee, importer, exporter or any other person, for the purpose of inspecting any books, records, and documents and any property, process, or matter that the officer considers,-
(3) The officer of Customs may make extracts from or copies of any such books, documents or records.
(4) Notwithstanding sub-sections (2) and (3) of this section, an officer of Customs shall not enter any private dwelling except with the consent of an occupier or owner thereof or pursuant to a warrant issued under this Act.]
(2) An Authorized Economic Operator shall enjoy simplified Customs formalities in accordance with the terms and conditions as prescribed by the Board.
(3) The Government may enter into international agreements to award the Authorized Economic Operator benefits provided under this section to the persons established in countries other than Bangladesh:
Provided that the Government is satisfied that the conditions and obligations defined by the relevant legislation of such other countries are equivalent to those prescribed under this section and that such benefits are allowed to persons established in Bangladesh on a reciprocal basis.
(4) Subject to international agreements to sub-section (3), the Board shall award the Authorized Economic Operator benefits provided under this section to those persons who fulfill the conditions and comply with obligations defined by the relevant legislation of the foreign country.
When any dutiable goods have been entered for warehousing and assessed under section 80, the owner of such goods may apply for leave to deposit the same in any warehouse appointed or licensed under this Act.
Every such application shall be in writing signed by the applicant, and shall be in such form as may be prescribed by the Board.
(1) When any such application has been made in respect of any goods, the owner of the goods to which it relates shall execute a bond, binding himself in a penalty of twice the amount of the duty assessed under section 80 or section 81 192 * on such goods,-
(2) Every such bond shall be in such form as is from time to time prescribed by the Board, and shall relate to the goods or portion of the goods of one conveyance only.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in sub-section (2), for the purposes of sub-section (1), the 194Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may permit any importer to enter into a general bond in such amount and subject to such conditions, limitations or restrictions as the 195Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may determine in respect of the warehousing of goods to be imported by such importer within a specified period.
(4) A bond executed under this section by an importer in respect of any goods shall continue in force notwithstanding the transfer of the goods to any other person or the removal of the goods to another warehouse or warehousing station:
Provided that, where the whole of the goods or any part thereof are transferred to another person, the appropriate officer may accept a fresh bond from the transferee in a sum equal to twice the amount of the duty assessed on the goods transferred and thereupon the bond executed by the transferor shall be deemed to be discharged to the extent to which the fresh bond has been executed by the transferee.
(2) A pass shall be sent with the goods specifying the name of the owner of such goods and the name or number of the importing conveyance, the marks, numbers and contents of each package, and the warehouse or place in the warehouse wherein they are to be deposited.
(3) After depositing such goods mentioned in sub-section (1) the owner of such goods shall inform the concerned Commissioner of Customs regarding the warehousing of the goods.
(1) On receipt of the goods, the pass shall be examined by the warehouse-keeper, and shall be returned to the appropriate officer.
(2) No package, butt, cask or other container shall be admitted into any warehouse unless it bears the marks and numbers specified in, and otherwise corresponds with, the pass for its admission.
(3) if the goods be found to correspond with the pass, the warehouse-keeper shall certify to that effect on the pass, and the warehousing of such goods shall be deemed to have been completed.
(4) If the goods do not so correspond, the fact shall be reported by the warehouse-keeper for the orders of the appropriate officer, and the goods shall either be returned to the custom-house in charge of an officer of Customs or kept in deposit pending such orders as the warehouse-keeper deems most convenient.
(5) If the quantity or value of any goods has been incorrectly stated in the bill of entry, due to inadvertence or bona fide error, the error may be rectified at any time before the warehousing of the goods is completed, and not subsequently.
Except as provided in section 94, all goods shall be warehoused in the packages, butts, casks or other containers in which they have been imported.
(1) Whenever any goods are lodged in a public warehouse or a licensed private warehouse, the warehouse-keeper shall deliver a warrant signed by him as such to the person lodging the goods.
(2) Such warrant shall be in such form as the Board may from time to time prescribe, and shall be transferable by the endorsement; and the endorsee shall be entitled to receive the goods specified in such warrant on the same terms as those on which the person who originally lodged the goods would have been entitled to receive the same.
(3) The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, exempt any class of goods from the operation of this section.
(2) The appropriate officer may cause any warehouse, except a special bonded warehouse, to be locked.
(3) Subject to sub-section (4), no person shall, without the written permission of the appropriate officer-
(4) An officer-
shall have access to any part of a warehouse and power to examine the goods, records, accounts and documents therein and ask any question as may deem necessary.
(1) The appropriate officer may at any time by order in writing direct that any goods or packages lodged in any warehouse shall be opened, weighed or otherwise examined; and, after any goods have been so opened, weighed or examined, may cause the same to be sealed or marked in such manner as he thinks fit.
(2) When any goods have been so sealed and marked after examination, they shall not be again opened without the permission of the appropriate officer; and, when any such goods have been opened with such permission, the packages shall, if he thinks fit, be again sealed or marked.
(1) Any owner of goods lodged in a warehouse shall, at any time within the hours of business, have access to his goods in the presence of an officer of Customs, and an officer of Customs shall, upon application for the purpose being made in writing to the appropriate officer, be deputed to accompany such owner.
(2) When an officer of Customs is specially employed to accompany such owner, a sum sufficient to meet the expense thereby incurred shall, subject to rules, be paid by such owner to the appropriate officer, and such sum shall, if the appropriate officer so directs, be paid in advance.
(1) With the sanction of the appropriate officer and on payment of such fees as may be prescribed by rules, the owner of any goods may, either before or after warehousing the same -
(2) After any such goods have been so separated and repacked in proper or approved packages, the appropriate officer may, at the request of the owner of such goods, cause or permit any refuse, damaged or surplus goods remaining after such separation or repacking (or at the like request, any goods which may not be worth the duty) to be destroyed, and may remit the duty payable thereon.
(1) Subject to rules, the owner of any warehoused goods may, 201by giving fifteen days prior notice in writing to the 202Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board, carry on any manufacturing process or other operations in the warehouse in relation to such goods.
(2) Where in the course of any such operation or process there is any waste or refuse the following provisions shall apply, namely:-
Provided that such waste or refuse is either destroyed or duty is paid on such waste or refuse as if it had been imported into Bangladesh in that form.
203(b) If the whole or any part of the goods produced by such operation or process are cleared from the warehouse for home-consumption, duty and other taxes shall be charged on the quantity of such goods cleared for home-consumption and also on the warehoused goods wasted or turned into refuse in the course of the operation or processing carried on in relation to such goods cleared for home-consumption in a manner to be prescribed by rules:Provided that the value for assessment purposes under this clause shall, notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act, be determined by the 204Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board.
(2) A table of the rates of rent and other charges fixed under sub-section (1) shall be displayed in a conspicuous part of such warehouse.
(3) If any rent or other charges are not paid within ten days from the date when they become due, the warehouse-keeper may, after due notice to the owner of the warehoused goods and with the permission of the appropriate officer, cause to be sold (any transfer of the warehoused goods notwithstanding) such portion of the goods as may be sufficient to realise the unpaid rent and other charges.
No warehoused goods shall be taken out of any warehouse, except on clearance for home-consumption or export or for removal to another warehouse, or as otherwise provided in this Act.
(2) The Commissioaner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioaner of Customs authorized by the Board in this behalf may extend the period of warehousing mentioned in sub-section (1) for further period of six months if the goods specified in sub-section (1) are not likely to deteriorate.
207(2A) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1) and (2), goods imported and warehoused by a hundred percent export oriented ship building industry, may remain in such warehouse for a period not exceeding forty eight months from the date of warehousing.(3) Goods imported for and warehoused in any diplomatic bonded warehouse, may remain in the warehouse for a period not exceeding twelve months from the date of warehousing.
208(4) Warehoused goods other than the goods mentioned in sub-sections (1), (2A) and (3) may remain in the warehouse for a period not exceeding six months following the date of execution of the bond under section 86 in respect of such goods.](5) In the case of any goods specified in sub-sections (3) and (4) which are not likely to deteriorate, the period for warehousing of such goods may, with reasons in writing, be extended by the Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorized by the Board in this behalf for a period not exceeding three months and subsequently by the Board for a further period not exceeding three months.
(6) The Commissioner of customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorized by the Board in this behalf may reduce the period for warehousing mentioned in sub-sections (1), (3), and (4) to such reasonable period as he deems fit in each case, if the goods mentioned in sub-sections are likely to deteriorate.]
(1) Any owner of goods warehoused under this Act may, within the period of their warehousing under section 98, and with the permission of the 210Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board 211or any officer authorised for the purpose by the 212Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board, on such conditions and after giving such security, if any, as 213that Commissioner directs, remove goods from one warehouse to another warehouse in the same warehousing station.
(2) When any owner desires to remove any goods, he shall apply for permission to do so in such form as the Board may prescribe.
(1) Any owner of goods warehoused at any warehousing station may, within the period of their warehousing under section 98, remove the same for the purpose of warehousing them at any other warehousing station.
(2) When any owner desires to remove any goods for such purpose, he shall apply to the 214Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board in such form and manner as the Board may prescribe stating therein the particulars of the goods to be removed, and the name of the customs-station to which they are to be removed.
(1) When permission is granted for the removal of any goods from one warehousing station to another under section 100, an account containing the particulars thereof shall be transmitted by the appropriate officer of the customs-station of removal to the appropriate officer of the customs-station of destination.
(2) The person requiring the removal shall before such removal enter into a bond with one sufficient surety, in a sum equal at least to the duty chargeable on such goods, for the due arrival and re-warehousing thereof at the custom-station of destination, within such time, as the 215Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board directs.
(3) Such bond may be taken by the appropriate officer either the customs-station of removal or at the customs-station of destination as best suits the convenience of the owner.
(4) If such bond is taken at customs-station of destination, a certificate thereof signed by the appropriate officer of such station shall at the time of the removal of such goods be produced to the appropriate officer at the customs-station of removal; and such bond shall not be discharged unless such goods are produced to the appropriate officer, and duly re-warehoused at the customs-station of destination within the time allowed for such removal or are otherwise accounted for to the satisfaction of such officer; nor until the full duty due upon any deficiency of such goods, not so accounted for, has been paid.
216(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in the aforesaid sub-sections, the 217Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may prescribe such conditions as he deems fit for the removal of warehoused goods from special bonded warehouse.The 218Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may permit any person desirous of removing warehoused goods to enter into a general bond, with such sureties, in such amount and under such conditions as 219that Commissioner approves, for the removal, from time to time, of any goods from one warehouse to another, either in the same or in a different warehousing station and for the due arrival and re-warehousing of such goods at the destination within such time as 220that Commissioner directs.
Upon the arrival of warehoused goods at the customs-station of destination, they shall be entered and warehoused in like manner as goods are entered and warehoused on the first importation thereof, and under the laws and rules, in so far as such laws and rules are applicable, which regulate the entry and warehousing of such last-mentioned goods.
Provided that necessary permission shall be taken from Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board fifteen days in advance in case of special bonded warehouse for special purposes to be determined by the Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board.
Any owner of warehoused goods may, at any time within the period of their warehousing under section 98, clear such goods for export out of Bangladesh on payment of all rent, penalties, interest and other charges payable as aforesaid but without paying any import duty thereon:
Provided that, if the Government is of the opinion that warehoused goods of any specified description are likely to be smuggled back into Bangladesh, it may, by notification in the official Gazette, direct that such goods shall not be exported to any place outside Bangladesh without payment of duty or allow them to be exported subject to such restrictions and conditions as may be specified in the notification.
Any warehoused provisions and stores may be exported within the period of their warehousing under section 98 without payment of import duty for use on board any conveyance proceeding to a foreign territory.
(1) An application to clear goods from any warehouse for home-consumption or for export shall be made in such form as the Board may prescribe.
(2) Such application shall ordinarily be made to the appropriate officer at least twenty-four hours before it is intended to clear such goods 222:
Provided that in the case of Special Bonded Warehouses, the procedure to be followed will be determined by the 223Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board.
If any goods upon which duties are levied ad valorem are damaged or deteriorated due to an unavoidable accident or cause after they have been entered for warehousing and assessed under section 80 and before they are cleared for home consumption, their value in the damaged or deteriorated state may be appraised, if the owner so desires, by an officer of Customs and the duty leviable thereon shall be diminished in proportion to the diminution of their value and a new bond for twice the amount of the diminished duty may, at the option of the owner, be executed by him to replace the bond originally executed.
[Re-assessment on alteration of duty.- omitted by section 33 of অর্থ আইন, ২০০১ (২০০১ সনের ৩০ নং আইন) .]
When any warehoused goods of such class or description as the Board having regard to the volatility of such goods and the manner of their storage may, by notification in the official Gazette, specify are, at the time of delivery from a warehouse, found to be deficient in quantity and the 224Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board is satisfied that such deficiency is on account of natural loss, no duty shall be charged on such deficiency.
In respect of goods specified hereunder the appropriate officer may demand and upon such demand the owner of such goods shall forthwith pay the full amount of duty chargeable on such goods together with all rent, penalties, interest and other charges payable in respect of them, namely:-
(2) In case the demand is not discharged within fifteen days of the date of such notice, the goods so detained may be sold.
(3) The net proceeds of any such sale shall be entered upon and adjusted against the bond and the surplus, if any, remaining after full satisfaction of the bond shall be disposed of in the manner provided in section 201.
(4) No transfer or assignment of the goods shall prevent the appropriate officer from proceeding against such goods in the manner above provided, for any amount due thereon.
(1) When any warehoused goods are taken out of any warehouse, the appropriate officer shall cause the fact to be noted on the back of the bond.
(2) Every note so made shall specify the quantity and description of such goods, the purposes for which they have been removed, the date of removal, the name of the person removing them, the number and date of the bill of export under which they have been taken away, if removed for exportation, or of the bill of entry, if removed for home-consumption and the amount of duty paid, if any.
227(3) In case of Special Bonded warehouses, the procedure to be followed will be determined by the 228Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board.(2) When such register shows that the whole of the goods covered by any bond have been cleared for home-consumption or export, or otherwise duly accounted for, and when all amounts due on account of such goods have been paid, the appropriate officer shall cancel such bond as discharged in full, and shall on demand deliver the cancelled bond to the person who executed it or who is entitled to receive it.
230(3) Any owner of a bonded warehouse or a special bonded warehouse shall make entry of the particulars of goods purchased from local market or imported by payment of duties and taxes into the register as prescirbed by the Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorized by the Board.If any warehoused goods, in respect of which a bond has been executed under section 86 and which have not been cleared for home-consumption are lost or destroyed by unavoidable accident or cause, the 231Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may in his discretion remit the duties due thereon:
Provided that, if any such goods be so lost or destroyed in a private warehouse, 232notice thereof in writing shall be given to the appropriate officer 233within 234three working days after the discovery of such loss or destruction.
The warehouse-keeper in respect of goods lodged in a public warehouse, and the licensee in respect of goods lodged in a private warehouse, shall be responsible for their due receipt therein and delivery therefrom, and their safe custody while deposited therein, according to the quantity, weight or gauge reported by the officer of Customs who has assessed such goods, allowance being made, if necessary, for deficiency in quantity on account of natural loss as provided in section 110:
Provided that no owner of goods shall be entitled to claim from the appropriate officer or from any keeper of a public warehouse, compensation for any loss or damage occurring to such goods while they are being passed into or out of such warehouse, or while they remain therein, unless it be proved that such loss or damage was occasioned by the wilful act or neglect of the warehouse-keeper or of an officer of Customs.
[Locking of warehouses.- Omitted by section 17 of the Finance Act, 2002 (Act No. XIV of 2002).]
[Special bonded warehouse.- Inserted by section 5 of অর্থ আইন, ১৯৯৫ (১৯৯৫ সনের ১২ নং আইন) and subsequently omitted by section 18 of অর্থ আইন, ২০০২ (২০০২ সনের ১৪ নং আইন) .]
The 236Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or any other Commissioner of Customs authorised by the Board may from time to time determine in what division of any 237warehouse, and in what manner, and on what terms, any goods may be deposited, and what sort of goods may be deposited in any such warehouse.
The expenses of carriage, packing and storage of goods on their receipt into or removal from a public warehouse shall, if paid by the appropriate officer or by the warehouse-keeper, be chargeable on the goods and be defrayed by, and recoverable from, the owner, in the manner provided in section 112.
The provisions of this Chapter shall not apply to-
Subject to the provisions of section 15 and the rules, the appropriate officer may, on application by the owner of any goods imported at any customs-station and specially and distinctly manifested at the time of importation as for transhipment to some other customs-station or foreign destination, grant leave to tranship the same without payment of duty, if any, chargeable on such goods at the customs-station of transhipment and, in case of goods to be transhipped to some other customs-station, with or without any security or bond for the due arrival and entry of the goods thereat.
An officer of Customs shall, in every case, be deputed free of charge to superintend the removal of transhipped goods from one conveyance to another.
All goods transhipped under section 121 to any customs station shall, on their arrival at such customs-station, be entered in the same manner as goods on their first importation and shall be dealt with like-wise.
Any provisions and stores in use or being carried for use on board a conveyance may, at the discretion of the appropriate officer be transhipped to another conveyance belonging wholly or partly to the same owner and present simultaneously at the same customs-station, without payment of duty.
Subject to the rules, a transhipment fee on any goods or class of goods transhipped under this Act may be levied at such rates, according to weight, measurement, quantity, number, bale, package or container, as the Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, prescribe for any customs-station or class of customs-stations.
The provisions of this Chapter shall not apply to
(1) Subject to the provisions of section 15 and the rules any goods imported in a conveyance and mentioned in the import manifest as for transit in the same conveyance to a customs-station in Bangladesh or to any destination outside Bangladesh may be allowed to be so transited without payment of duty, if any, leviable on such goods at the customs-station of transit.
(2) Any stores and provisions imported on board a conveyance which is in transit through Bangladesh to a destination outside Bangladesh may, subject to rules, be allowed to be consumed on board that conveyance without payment of the duties which would otherwise be chargeable on them.
Any goods may be transported from one part of Bangladesh to another through any foreign territory, subject to such conditions as to their due arrival at the destination as may be prescribed by rules.
Where any goods are entered for transit across Bangladesh to a destination outside Bangladesh, the appropriate officer may, subject to the provisions of the rules, allow the goods to be so transitted without payment of the duties which would otherwise be chargeable on such goods. 241:
Provided that such transit shall be subject to the submission of a guarantee or security for goods in transit as a surety for customs duties and other taxes chargeable thereon.
No goods other than passenger's baggage or mail bags or ballast urgently required for a vessel's safety shall be loaded or water-borne to be loaded on a conveyance at a place in a customs-station approved for the purpose under clause (b) of section 10, until an order under section 50 in respect of the conveyance has been given or permission in this behalf in writing has been granted by the appropriate officer.
Provided that the Commissioner of Customs may within a period of six months require the owner who has electronically transmitted a bill of export to the Customs computer system to submit to the appropriate officer a bill of export in paper duly signed by him or his authorised agent containing such information as the said Commissioner may specify;
Provided that the Board may in the case of any customs-station or wharf, by notification in the official Gazette, and subject to such restrictions and conditions, if any, as it thinks fit, exempt any specified goods or class of goods or any specified person or class of persons, from all or any of the provisions of this section 246:
Provided further that where the appropriate officer, in a particular case, has reason to believe that exportation of any goods in respect of which exemption has been notified under the first proviso should be intervened before its loading for exportation, he may, upon recording reasons, examine the goods or the bill of export or both, and may take other necessary action under this Act.
247(2) In a case where exemption has been allowed under the proviso to sub-section (1) and any goods have been exported subject to any conditions or under any guarantee or undertaking, the exporter shall forthwith fulfil such conditions or, as the case may be, the terms of the guarantee or undertaking and submit to the appropriate officer documents relating thereto, including proceeds realisation certificate or such other documentary evidence showing the remittance to Bangladesh of the sale proceeds of the goods exported as may be acceptable to the Board.Before any warehoused goods subject to excise duties, or goods entitled to drawback or repayment of customs-duties on exportation, or goods exportable only under particular rules or restrictions, are permitted to be exported, the owner shall, if required so to do, give security by bond in such sum not exceeding twice the duty leviable on such goods as the appropriate officer directs, with one sufficient surety, that such goods shall be exported and landed at the place for which they are entered outwards or shall be otherwise accounted for to the satisfaction of such officer.
Where the goods are cleared for shipment on a bill of export presented after port-clearance or permission to depart has been granted, the appropriate officer may, if he thinks fit, levy, in addition to any duty to which such goods are ordinarily liable, a charge not exceeding one per cent of the value of the goods determined in accordance with the provisions of section 25.
(1) If any goods mentioned in a bill of export or manifest be not loaded or be loaded and afterwards re-landed, the owner shall before the expiration of fifteen clear working days after the conveyance on which such goods were intended to be loaded or from which they were re-landed has left the customs-station, give information of such short-loading or re-landing to the appropriate officer save where the latter has occasioned the short-loading or re-landing.
(2) Upon an application being made to the appropriate officer within one year of such short-loading or re-landing any duty levied upon goods not loaded or upon goods loaded and afterwards re-landed shall be refunded to the person on whose behalf such duty was paid:
Provided that, where the required information of short-loading or re-landing is not given within the aforesaid period of fifteen days, the appropriate officer may make refund of duty contingent upon payment of such penalty, if any, as he may see fit to impose.
(1) If, after having cleared from any customs-station any conveyance without having discharged her cargo returns to such customs-station or puts into any other customs-station, any owner of goods in such conveyance, if he desires to land or tranship the same or any portion thereof for re-export, may, with the consent of the person-in-charge of the conveyance, apply to the appropriate officer in that behalf.
(2) The appropriate officer, if he grants the application, shall thereupon send an officer of Customs to watch the conveyance and to take charge of such goods during such re-landing or transhipment.
(3) Such goods shall not be allowed to be transhipped or re-exported free of duty by reason of the previous settlement of duty at the time of first export unless they are lodged and remain, until the time of re-export under the custody of an officer of Customs, in a place appointed by the appropriate officer, or are transhipped under such custody.
(4) All expenses attending such custody shall be borne by the owner.
(1) In either of the cases mentioned in section 135, the person-in-charge of the conveyance may enter such conveyance inwards and any owner of goods thereon may, with the consent of the person-in-charge of conveyance, land the same under the provisions of this Act and the rules.
(2) In every such case, any export duty paid shall be refunded on an application made by the owner of such goods within one year of their landing and any amount paid to owners as drawback or repayment of duty (whether of customs, excise or any other tax) shall be recovered from him or adjusted against the amount refundable.
(1) The appropriate officer may, on application by the person-in-charge of a conveyance which is obliged before completing her journey or voyage to put into any customs-station for repairs, permit him to land the goods or any portion thereof, and to place it in the custody of an officer of Customs during such repairs, and to load and export the same free of duty.
(2) All expenses attending such custody shall be borne by the person-in-charge of the conveyance.
(1) Where any goods are brought into a customs-station by reason of inadvertence, mis-direction or untraceability of the consignee, the Commissioner of Customs may, on application by the person-in-charge of the conveyance which brought such goods or of the consignor of such goods and subject to rules, allow export of such goods without payment of any duties (whether of import or export) chargeable thereon, provided that such goods have remained and a re-exported under the custody of an officer of Customs.
249(1A) Where any goods are brought into a customs-station by a reason other than the reasons mentioned in sub-section(1), the Commissioner of Customs may, with prior approval of the Board, allow re-exportation of such goods without payment of any duties chargeable thereon.(2) All expenses attending to such custody shall be borne by the applicant.
The owner of any baggage whether a passenger or a member of the crew shall, for the purpose of clearing it, make a verbal or written declaration of its contents in such manner as may be prescribed by rules to the appropriate officer and shall answer such questions as the said officer may put to him with respect to his baggage and any article contained therein or carried with him and shall produce such baggage and any such article for examination.
The rate of duty, if any, applicable to baggage shall be the rate in force on the date on which a declaration is made in respect of such baggage under section 139.
The appropriate officer may, subject to the limitations, conditions and restriction specified in the rules, pass free of duty any article in the baggage of a passenger or a member of the crew in respect of which the said officer is satisfied that it is bona fide meant for the use of such passenger or for making gift.
Where the baggage of passenger contains any article which is dutiable or the import of which is prohibited or restricted and in respect of which a true declaration has been made under section 139, the appropriate officer may, at the request of the passenger, detain such article for the purpose of being returned to him on his leaving Bangladesh.
Baggage of passengers and members of the crew in transit in respect of which a declaration has been made under section 139, may be permitted by the appropriate officer, subject to such limitations, conditions and restrictions as may be specified in the rules, to be so transited without payment of duty.
In the case of goods imported or exported by post, any label or declaration which contains the description, quantity and value thereof shall be deemed to be an entry for import or export, as the case may be, for the purposes of this Act.
(1) The rate of duty, if any, applicable to any goods imported by post shall be the rate in force on the date on which the postal authorities present to the appropriate officer the declaration or label referred to in section 144 for the purpose of assessing the duty thereon.
(2) The rate of duty, if any, applicable to any goods exported by post shall be the rate in force on the date on which the exporter delivers such goods to the postal authorities for exportation.
The provisions of this Chapter shall not apply to baggage.
(1) The consignor of any coastal goods shall present to the appropriate officer a bill of coastal goods in the form prescribed by the Board.
(2) Every such consignor shall make a declaration on the bill of coastal goods presented by him as to the truth of the contents thereof.
No vessel shall take on board any coastal goods until the bill relating to such goods has been passed by the appropriate officer and delivered to the master of the vessel by the consignor:
Provided that the appropriate officer may, in circumstances of exceptional nature, on a written application by the master of the vessel, permit loading of coastal goods pending the presentation and passing of bills relating to such goods.
(1) The master of a vessel carrying any coastal goods shall carry on board the vessel all bills delivered to him under section 148 and shall, within twenty-four hours of arrival of the vessel at any customs-port or coastal port, deliver to the appropriate officer all bills relating to the goods which are to be unloaded at that port.
(2) Where any coastal goods are unloaded at any port, the appropriate officer shall permit their clearance if he is satisfied that they are entered in a bill delivered to him under sub-section (1).
The master of a vessel carrying coastal goods which has touched at any foreign port immediately before its arrival at a port of Bangladesh shall deliver, along with the bills referred to in section 149, a declaration stating that fact and indicating the particulars and specifications of the cargo, if any, discharged or taken on board at such foreign port.
(1) There shall be kept on board every coasting vessel a cargo book stating the name of the vessel, the port at which she is registered and the name of the master.
(2) It shall be the duty of the master of every coasting vessel to enter or cause to be entered in the cargo book-
(3) The entries relating to the loading and discharge of goods shall be made respectively at the ports of lading and discharge.
(4) Every such master shall on demand produce the cargo book for the inspection of the appropriate officer and such officer may make such note or remark therein as he considers necessary.
No coastal goods shall be loaded on, or unloaded from, any vessel at any port other than a customs-port or a coastal port declared under section 9.
(1) No coasting vessel which has brought or loaded any coastal goods at a customs-port or coastal port shall depart from such port until a written order to that effect has been given by the appropriate officer.
(2) No such order shall be given until-
(1) Sections 64, 65 and 66 shall, so far as may be, apply to coastal goods as they apply to imported goods or goods for export.
(2) Sections 48 and 60 shall, so far as may be, apply to vessels carrying coastal goods as they apply to vessels carrying imported goods or goods for export.
(3) The Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, direct that all or any of the other provisions of Chapter VII and the provisions of section 78 shall apply to coastal goods or vessel carrying coastal goods with such exceptions and modifications, if any, as may be specified in the notification.
No goods shall be carried coastwise or shipped as stores in a coasting vessel contrary to any prohibition or restriction imposed by or under any law, nor shall such goods or stores be brought to any place in Bangladesh for the purpose of being so carried or shipped.
(1) Whoever commits any offence described in column 1 of the Table below shall, in addition to and not in derogation of any punishment to which he may be liable under any other law, be liable to the punishment mentioned against that offence in column 2 thereof:-
| TABLE | ||
| Offences | Penalties | Section of this Act to which offences has reference |
| 1. If any person contravenes any provision of this Act or any rule made thereunder, or abets any such contravention or fails to comply with any provision of this Act or any such rule with which it was his duty to comply, where no express penalty has been provided elsewhere for such contravention or failure, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 250 one lac Taka. | General |
| 2. (i) If any goods imported by sea or air be unloaded or attempted to be unloaded at any place other than a customs-port or customs-airport declared under section 9 for unloading of such goods; or | 251Such goods shall be liable to confiscation 252or to a penalty not exceeding twice the value of the goods or to both and any person concerned in the offence shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding ten times the value of the goods; and upon conviction by a Magistrate he shall further be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six years and to fine not exceeding ten times the value of such goods. | 9 & 10 |
| (ii) if any goods be imported by land or inland water through any route other than a route declared under clause (c) of section 9 for the import of such goods; or | ||
| (iii) if any goods be attempted to be exported by sea or air from any place other than a customs-port or customs-airport appointed for the loading of such goods; or | ||
| (iv) if any goods be attempted to be exported by land or inland water through any route other than a route declared under clause (c) of section 9 for the export of such goods; or | ||
| (v) if any imported goods be brought into any bay, gulf, creek or river for the purpose of being landed at a place other than a customs-port; or | ||
| (vi) if any goods be brought near the land frontier or the coast of Bangladesh or near any bay, gulf, creek or river for the purpose of being exported from a place other than a customs-station or where any place has been approved under clause (b) of section 10 for the loading of such goods, from any place other than the place so approved; |
| 3. (i) If any person exports or lands goods, or aids in the export or landing of goods, or knowingly keeps or conceals or knowingly permits or procures to be kept or concealed, any goods exported or landed, or intended to be exported or landed, contrary to the provisions of this Act; or | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 253fifty thousand Taka. | General |
| (ii) If any person be found to have been on board any conveyance liable to confiscation on account of the commission of the offence under clause 4 of this Table, while such conveyance is within any place which is not a customs-station for the export and landing of goods; | 9 & 10 | |
| 4. If any conveyance which has been within the limits of any customs-station in Bangladesh with goods on board, be afterwards found anywhere in Bangladesh with the whole or any portion of such goods missing, unless the person-in-charge of the conveyance be able to account for the loss of, or deficiency in, the goods; | the duty in respect of goods so lost or deficient shall be payable by the person-in-charge of the conveyance; and such conveyance shall also be liable to confiscation. | 9 & 10 |
| 5. (i) If any goods are unloaded from any conveyance inward bound, without the | the person-in-charge of every such conveyance used for irregular import or export of | 9 & 10 |
| authority of the appropriate officer into any other conveyance at any place other than a place declared under section 9 for the unloading of goods; or if any goods are loaded into any conveyance outward bound from any other conveyance, without such authority, from or at any place other than a place declared under section 9 for the loading of goods; or | goods shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 254fifty thousand Taka; and the goods and the conveyance shall also be liable to confiscation. | |
| (ii) If any goods on which drawback has been granted are put, without such authority, on board any conveyance for the purpose of being re-landed; | ||
| 6. If any vessel arriving at, or departing from, any customs-port fails, when so required under section 14 to bring-to at any such station as has been appointed by the Commissioner of Customs for the boarding or landing of an officer of Customs; | the master of such vessel shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 255twenty thousand Taka. | 14 |
| 7. (i) If any vessel arriving at any customs-port, after having come to its proper place of mooring or unloading, removes from such place, except with the authority of the Conservator, obtained in accordance with the provisions of the Ports Act, 1908 (XV of 1908) or other lawful authority, to some other place of mooring or unloading; or | the master of such vessel shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 256twenty thousand Taka; and the vessel, if not entered, shall not be allowed to enter until the penalty is paid. | 14 |
| (ii) if any vessel not brought into port by a pilot be not anchored or moored in accordance with any direction of the Commissioner of Customs under section 14; | ||
| 8. If any goods be smuggled into or out of Bangladesh, | such goods shall be liable to confiscation and any person concerned in the offence shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding ten times the value of the goods; and upon conviction by a Magistrate he shall further be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six years and to fine not exceeding ten times the value of such goods, 257 *. | General |
| 9. (i) If any goods, not being goods referred to in clause 8, are imported into or exported from Bangladesh evading payment of leviable customs-duties or in violation of any prohibition or restriction on the importation or exportation of such goods imposed by or under this Act or any other law; or | such goods shall be liable to confiscation; and any person concerned in the offence shall also be liable to a penalty not exceeding two times the value of the goods. | 15 & 16 |
| (ii) if any attempt be made so to import or export any such goods; or | |||
| (iii) if any goods be found in any package produced before any officer of Customs as containing no such goods; or | |||
| (iv) if any goods be found either before or after landing or shipment to have been concealed in any manner on board any conveyance within the limits of any sea-port, airport, railway station or other place where conveyances are ordinarily loaded or unloaded; or | |||
| (v) if any such goods, the exportation of which is prohibited or restricted as aforesaid be brought within a customs-area or to a wharf, with the intention of loading them on a conveyance for exportation in violation of such prohibition or restriction; | |||
| 10. If, upon an application to pass any goods through the customs-house, any person not being the owner of such goods, and not having proper and sufficient authority from the owner, subscribes or attests any document relating to any goods on behalf of such owner; | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 258two lakh Taka. | General |
| 25910A. If any person contravenes the conditions, limitations or restrictions, if any, imposed under section 19 or section 20 in respect of any goods which have been exempted from the payment of the customs-duties, under that section, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 260two times the duty chargeable on such goods; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation; and | 19 & 20 | |
| 11. If any goods which have been allowed temporary admission under section 21 without payment of duty subject to the condition of subsequent export be not exported, or any goods duty on which has not been paid or having been paid has been refunded be sold or transferred or otherwise disposed of in contravention of the rules or a special order made under that section, | any person who sells, transfers or otherwise disposes of such goods, or aids or abets the sale, transfer or disposal of such goods, and any person in whose possession such goods are found shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding five times the duty chargeable on such goods; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 21 | |
| 26111A. If any person wilfully or negligently imports such goods without Pre-shipment Inspection which is not exempted from mandatory Pre-shipment Inspection | Such person shall be liable to pay Pre-shipment inspection service charge at the rate as determined by the Government by the Notification published in the official Gazette and a penalty not exceeding the value of the goods, but not less than ten percent of the value of the goods. | ||
| 12. If any person who without any reasonable excuse fails to comply with any requisition made under section 26 or to furnish any information as required by or under the rules to be furnished, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 262fifty thousand Taka. | 26 |
| 13. If any person wilfully contravenes any rule relatable to section 28 with respect to any spirits, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 263twenty thousand Taka; and all such spirit shall be liable to confiscation. | 28 |
| 14. If any person commits an offence under section 32, | 264Such person shall be liable to a penalty at least twice but not exceeding four times the amount of the tax evaded in respect of which such offence is committed and such goods shall be liable to confiscation; and upon conviction by a Magistrate such person shall further be liable to rigorous imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years or to a fine not exceeding Taka fifty thousand or to both. | 32 |
| 15. If any goods in respect of which draw-back has been paid or any warehoused goods cleared for exportation are not duly exported or after being exported are unloaded or re-landed at any other place in Bangladesh otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of this Act and the rules, | any person who fails to export such goods or who unloads or re-lands the goods or any person who aids or abets the evasion of export or such unloading or re-landing shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding three times the value of such goods or 265* and the goods which are not so exported or which are so unloaded or re-landed together with the conveyance from which they are unloaded or re-landed shall also be liable to confiscation. | 35 & 105 |
| 16. If any provisions or stores on which drawback has been paid or on which duty has not been paid for reason of their being provisions or stores meant to be exported for use on board are not loaded on board or after being loaded are subsequently unloaded without the permission or the appropriate officer, | such provisions or stores shall be liable to confiscation. | 24 & 35 |
| 17. If any person fraudulently claims draw-back on any goods on which drawback is disallowed under section 39 or includes any such goods in his claim for drawback, | such goods shall be liable to confiscation. | 39 |
| 18. If, in any river or port where in a place has been fixed under section 43 by the Board, any vessel arriving passes beyond such place, before delivery of a manifest to the pilot, officer of Customs, or other person duly authorised to receive the same, | the master of such vessel shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 266fifty thousand Taka. | 43 |
| 19. If the master of any vessel arriving, which remains outside or below any place fixed, under section 43, wilfully omits, for twenty-four hours after anchoring, to deliver a manifest as required by this Act, | such master shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 267fifty thousand Taka. | 43 |
| 20. If, after any vessel has entered any customs-port in which a place has not been fixed under section 43, the master of such vessel wilfully omits, for twenty-four hours, after anchoring, to deliver a manifest as required by this Act, | such master shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 268fifty thousand Taka. | 43 |
| 21. If, after any conveyance other than a vessel has entered any land customs-station or customs-airport, the person-in-charge of such conveyance wilfully omits, for twenty-four hours after arrival, to deliver a manifest as required by this Act, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 269fifty thousand Taka. | 44 |
| 22. If any person required by this Act to receive an import manifest from the person-in-charge of a conveyance refuses to do so, or fails to countersign the same or to enter thereon the particulars referred to in section 46, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 270twenty thousand Taka. | 43 & 46 |
| 23 (i) If, any import or export manifest delivered under any provision of this Act is not signed by the person delivering the same or is not in the form prescribed under this Act or does not contain the particulars of the conveyance, goods and journey required to be stated in such manifest by or under this Act; or | the person delivering such manifest shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 271fifty thousand Taka. | 45 & 53 |
| (ii) If any manifest so delivered does not contain a specification true to the best of such personÔÇÖs knowledge of all goods imported or to be exported in such conveyance, |
| 24. (i) If any goods entered in the import manifest of a conveyance are not found in that conveyance; or | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding twice the amount of duty chargeable on the goods not found on the conveyance or, if such goods are not dutiable or the duty thereon cannot be ascertained, to a penalty not exceeding 272twenty five thousand Taka for every missing or deficient package or separate article, and in the case of bulk goods to a penalty not exceeding the value of the goods, or 273two lakh Taka, whichever be higher. | 45, 53 & 55 |
| (ii) if the quantity found in the conveyance is short, and the shortage is not accounted for to the satisfaction of the officer-in-charge of the custom-house, | ||
| 25. If any bulk is broken on a vessel in contravention of section 47 or without a special pass granted under section 49, | the master of such vessel shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 274two lakh Taka. | 47 & 49 |
| 26 (i) If any bill of lading or copy required under section 48, is false and the person-in-charge of the conveyance is unable to satisfy the appropriate officer that he was not aware of the fact; or if any such bill or copy has been altered with fraudulent intent; or | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 275two lakh Taka. | 48 |
| (ii) if the goods mentioned in any such bill or copy have not been bona fide shipped or loaded as shown therein; or if any such bill of lading or any bill of lading of which a copy is delivered has not been made previously to the departure of the conveyance from the place where the goods referred to in such bill of lading were shipped or loaded; or | ||
| (iii) if any part of the cargo or goods has been stayed, destroyed or thrown overboard, or if any package has been opened and any part of the cargo or goods be not accounted for to the satisfaction of the appropriate officer, | ||
| 27. If the person-in-charge of a conveyance attempts to depart from the customs-station without a port-clearance or written permission of the appropriate officer, granted under section 51 or section 52, as the case may be, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 276two lakh Taka. | 51 & 52 |
| 28. If any conveyance actually departs from a customs-station without obtaining the port-clearance or the written permission of the appropriate officer, as the case may be, | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 277two lakh Taka. | 51 & 52 |
| 29. If any pilot takes charge of any vessel proceeding out of Bangladesh notwithstanding that the master of the vessel does not produce a port clearance, | such pilot shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 278two lakh Taka. | 51 |
| 30. If the person-in-charge of a conveyance refuses to receive on board any officer of Customs deputed under section 60, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 279twenty thousand Taka for each day during which such officer is not received on board the conveyance, and the conveyance if not entered shall not be allowed to enter until such penalty is paid. | 61 |
| 31. If the master of a vessel or the person-in-charge of a conveyance other than a vessel or an aircraft refuses to provide such officer with suitable accommodation and adequate quantity of fresh water, | such master or person shall, in each such case, be liable to a penalty not exceeding 280twenty thousand Taka. | 61 |
| 32. (i) If the person-in-charge of any conveyance refuses to allow such conveyance or any box, place or close receptacle therein to be searched when so required by an officer of Customs bearing a written order to search; or | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 281two lakh Taka. | 62 |
| (ii) if an officer of Customs places any lock, mark or seal upon any goods in any conveyance, and such lock, mark or seal is wilfully opened, altered or broken, before due delivery of such goods; or | ||
| (iii) if any such goods are secretly conveyed away; or | ||
| (iv) if any hatchway or entrance to the hold of a conveyance after having been fastened down by an officer of Customs is opened without his permission, | ||
| 33. If the person-in-charge of a conveyance laid up by the withdrawal of the officer of Customs shall, before application is made by him for an officer of Customs to superintendent the receipt of goods, causes or suffers to be put on board such conveyance any goods whatever in contravention of section 64, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 282two lakh Taka and the goods if protected by a pass or written order shall be liable to be re-landed for examination at the expense of the person-in-charge and, if not protected by a pass or written order, shall be liable to confiscation. | 64 |
| 34. If the person-in-charge of a conveyance, in any case other than that provided for in clause 33 of this Table, causes or suffers any goods to be discharged, put on board the conveyance or water-borne contrary to the provisions of section 64 or section 65 or any rules relating to baggage, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 283two lakh Taka; and all goods so discharged, put on board the conveyance or water-borne shall be liable to confiscation. | 64, 65 & 141 |
| 35 (i) If, when a boat-note is required section 68, any goods water-borne for the purpose of being landed from any vessel and warehoused or passed for importation, or of being shipped for exportation, be found without such note; or | the person by whose authority the goods are being landed or shipped, and the person-in-charge of the boat, shall each be liable to a penalty not exceeding twice the amount of duty leviable on the goods, or, if such goods be non-dutiable to a penalty not exceeding 284five thousand Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 68 |
| (ii) if any goods, are found on board any boat in excess of such boat-note, whether such goods are intended to be landed, from, or to be shipped on board any vessel, | ||
| 36. If any person refuses to receive, or fails to sign, or to note the prescribed particulars upon, any boat-note, as required by section 68, or if any master or officer of a vessel receiving the same fails to deliver it when required so to do by any officer of Customs authorised to make such requisition, | such person, master or officer shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 285twenty thousand Taka. | 68 |
| 37 (i) If any goods are, without permission, shipped or loaded on board a conveyance proceeding out of Bangladesh or are water-borne to be so shipped or loaded or are landed except from or at a wharf or other place duly appointed for the purpose; or | the person by whose authority the goods are shipped, loaded, landed, water-borne or transhipped and the person-in-charge of the conveyance employed in conveying them, shall each be liable to a penalty not exceeding five times the value of the goods; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 66, 69 & 70 |
| (ii) If any goods water-borne for the purpose of being landed or shipped or loaded are not landed, shipped or loaded without unnecessary delay; or | ||
| (iii) if the boat containing such goods be found out of the proper track between the vessel and the wharf or other proper place of landing or shipping or loading and such deviation be not accounted for to the satisfaction of the appropriate officer; or | ||
| (iv) if any goods are transhipped contrary to the provisions of section 70, | ||
| 38. If, after the issue of a notification under section 71 with regard to any port, any goods are found within the limits of such port on board any boat not duly licensed and registered, | the owner or the person-in-charge of the boat shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 286five thousand Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation unless they are covered by a special permit of the Commissioner of Customs. | 71 |
| 39. If any boat or vessel not exceeding one hundred tons does not comply with the rules relatable to section 72, | such boat or such vessel shall be liable to confiscation. | 72 |
| 40. If any person-in-charge of any conveyance unloads or suffers to be unloaded any goods not duly entered in the manifest of such conveyance, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 287two lakh Taka. | 45 & 75 |
| 41. If any goods are found concealed in any place, box or close receptacle in any conveyance and are not duly accounted for to the satisfaction of the officer-in-charge of the customs-house, | such goods shall be liable to confiscation. | General |
| 42. If any goods are found on board any conveyance in excess of those entered in the manifest, or not corresponding with the specification therein contained, | such goods shall be liable to confiscation. | 45 & 75 |
| 43. If after any goods have been landed and before they have been passed through the custom-house, the owner removes or attempts to remove them, with the intention of defrauding the revenue, | if the goods cannot be recovered, the owner shall be liable, in addition to full duty, to a penalty not exceeding five times the amount of such duty, or, if such goods are not dutiable or duty thereon cannot be ascertained, to a penalty not exceeding 288two lakh Taka for every missing or deficient package or separate article, and in the case of bulk goods to a penalty not exceeding 289two lakh Taka, or the value of the goods, whichever be higher. | 75 & 80 |
| 29043A. If any person or agent receiving goods or any portion into his custody, | 291 * the person or the agent concerned shall be liable, in addition to full duty, | 78; |
| removes or attempts to remove them from the port area with the intention of defrauding the revenue, | to a penalty not exceeding ten times the amount of such duty, or, if such goods are not dutiable or duty thereon cannot be ascertained, to a penalty not exceeding 292two lakh Taka for every missing or deficient package or separate article, and in the case of bulk goods, to a penalty not exceeding 293two lakh Taka, or ten times the value of the goods, whichever be higher; and upon conviction by a Magistrate he shall further be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 294ten years. | |
| 44. If, in relation to any goods in respect of which a declaration is required on a bill of entry or a bill of export, as the case may be, it be found that the goods have apparently been packed so as to deceive the officer of Customs, | the owner of the goods and every person who aids or abets such packing shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 295two lakh Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 79 & 131 |
| 45. If any goods have been declared on a bill of entry or bill of export, as the case may be, and it is found that goods not so declared have been concealed in, or mixed with, the goods so declared, | the owner of such goods and every person who aids or abets such concealment or mixing of goods shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 296two lakh Taka; and both the goods so declared and the goods not so declared shall be liable to confiscation. | 79 & 131 |
| 46. If, when goods are passed by bale or by package, any omission or mis-description thereof tending to injure the revenue be discovered, | the person guilty of such omission or mis-description shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding ten times the amount of duty which might have been lost to Government by such omission or mis-description, unless it be proved to the satisfaction of the officer-in-charge of the customs-house that the variance was accidental. | 79 & 88 |
| 47. If without entry duly made, any goods are taken or passed out of any customs-station, | the person so taking or passing such goods, shall, in every such case, be liable to a penalty not exceeding five times the value of goods; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 79 |
| 29729847A. If any person- | ||
| (i) without lawful authority gains access to, or attempts to gain access to, any Customs computerised entry processing system; or | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding twice the amount of duty taxes involved or five lakh Taka whichever is higher; and on conviction before a Magistrate, shall be further liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or to a fine not exceeding five lakh Taka, or to both. | 79B |
| (ii) without lawful authority gains access to, or attempts to gain access to, any Customscomputerised entry processing system or any trade or passenger information received for the purpose of Customs clearance, uses or discloses information obtained from such system or arrangement for a purpose that is not authorized; or | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding five lakh Taka; and on conviction before a Magistrate, shall be further liable toimprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or to a fine not exceeding five lakh Taka, or to both | 79B & 204B |
| (iii) having lawful access to any Customs computerised entry processing system or any trade or passenger information received for the purpose of Customs clearance, uses or discloses information obtained from such system or arrangement for a purpose that is not authorized; or | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding two lakh Taka; and on conviction before a Magistrate, shall be further liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or to fine not exceeding five lakh Taka, or to both. | 79B & 204B |
| (iv) who is not authorized to do so, receives information obtained from any Customs computerised entry processing system or from any other means for the purpose of Customs clearance, and uses, discloses,publishes or authorizes dissemination of such information, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding two lakh Taka; and on conviction before a Magistrate, shall be further liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or to fine not exceeding five lakh Taka, or to both. | 79B & 204B |
| 47B. If any person | ||
| (i) falsifies any record or information stored in any Customs computerised entry processing system; or | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding five lakh Taka; and on conviction before a Magistrate, shall be further liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or to a fine not exceeding five lakh Taka, or to both. | 79B to 79G |
| (ii) damages or impairs any Customs computerised entry processing system; or | ||
| (iii) damages or impairs any duplicate tape or disc or other medium on which any information obtained from Customs computerised entry processing system is held or stored otherwise than with the permission of the Board. | ||
| 47C. If any person- |
| (1) | (2) | (3) |
| (i) not being a registered user, uses a unique identifier to authenticate a transmission of information to the Customs computerised entry processing system; or | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding five lakh Taka; and on conviction before a Magistrate, shall be further liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years or to a fine not exceeding five lakh Taka, or to both. | 79B to 79G |
| (ii) being a registered user, uses the unique user identifier of any other registered user, to authenticate a transmission of information to the Customs computerised entry processing system, | ||
| 48. If any prohibited or dutiable goods are found, either before or after landing, concealed in any passenger's baggage, | the passenger shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding five times the value of the goods; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | General |
| 49. If any goods entered to be warehoused are carried into the warehouse, unless with the authority, or under the care, of the appropriate officer, and in such manner, by such persons, within such time, and by such roads or ways, as such officer directs, | any person so carrying them shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 299two lakh Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 87 |
| 50. If any goods entered to be warehoused are not duly warehoused in pursuance of such entry, or are withheld, or removed from any proper place of examination before they have been examined and certified by the appropriate officer, | such goods shall be deemed not to have been duly warehoused, and shall be liable to confiscation. | 88 |
| (1) | (2) | (3) |
| 51. If any warehoused goods be not warehoused in accordance with the provisions of Chapter XI, | 300such goods shall be liable to confiscation and a penalty twice the value of the goods shall also be imposed; and upon conviction by a Magistrate such keeper shall further be liable to rigorous imprisonment for a term not less than three months but not exceeding two years. | Chapter XI |
| 30151A. If any person misuses warehouse facilities for evading payment of customs duties and taxes leviable thereon. | A penalty twice the amount of duty and tax evaded shall be imposed on such person; and he shall also be liable to rigorous imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years by a Magistrate. | Chapter XI |
| 52. If the licensee of any private warehouse licensed under this Act does not open the same when required so to do by any officer entitled to have access thereto, or, upon demand made by any such officer, refuses access to any such officer, | such licensee shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 302303one lakhTaka, and shall further be liable to have his licence forthwith cancelled. | 91 |
| 53. If the keeper of any public warehouse, or the licensee of any private warehouse, neglects to show the goods warehoused therein, so that easy access may be had to every package 304parcel thereof, | such keeper or licensee shall, for every such neglect, be liable to a penalty not exceeding 305306one lakh Taka. | Chapter XI |
| (1) | (2) | (3) |
| or the records, accounts or documents, relating to such package or parcel, or refuses to answer questions put to him by an officer of Customs, | ||
| 54. If the owner of any warehoused goods, or any person in the employ of such owner, clandestinely opens any warehouse, or, except in the presence of the appropriate officer, gains access to his goods, | such owner or person shall in every such case, be liable to a penalty not exceeding 307two lakh Taka. | 93 |
| 55. (i) If any warehoused goods are opened in contravention of the provisions of section 92; or | such goods shall be liable to confiscation. | 92 & 94 |
| (ii) if any alteration be made in such goods or in the packing thereof, except as provided in section 94, | ||
| 56. If any warehoused goods that have been delivered as stores and provisions for use on board a conveyance under the authority of this Act are re-landed, sold or disposed of in Bangladesh without due entry and payment of duty, | the person-in-charge of the conveyance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 308two lakh Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 106 |
| 57. If any goods lodged in a private warehouse are found at the time of delivery therefrom to be deficient, and such deficiency is not due solely to natural loss, as allowed under section 110, | the licensee of such warehouse shall, unless the deficiency be accounted for to the satisfaction of the appropriate officer, be liable to a penalty equal to five times the duty chargeable on the goods so deficient. | 116 |
| 58. If the keeper of any public warehouse, or the licensee of any private warehouse, fails, on the requisition of any officer of Customs, to produce any goods which have been deposited in such warehouse, and which have not been duly cleared and delivered therefrom, and is unable to account for such failure to the satisfaction of the appropriate officer, | such keeper or licensee shall, for every such failure, be liable to pay the duties due on such goods, and also a penalty not exceeding 309two thousand five hundred Taka in respect of every package or parcel so missing or deficient. | 116 |
| 59. If any goods, after being duly warehoused, are fraudulently concealed in, 310* or abstracted from any package, or transferred from one package to another, or otherwise, for the purpose of illegal removal or concealment, | any person guilty of such removal, concealment, abstraction or transferment and every person aiding or abetting him shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 311two lakh Taka312and such goods shall be liable to confiscation. | Chapter XI |
| 60. If any goods lodged in a private warehouse are found to exceed the registered quantity, | 313such excess, unless accounted for to the satisfaction of the officer-in-charge, shall be charged with not exceeding three times the duty leviable thereon.. | Chapter XI |
| (1) | (2) | (3) |
| 61. If any goods be removed from the warehouse in which they were originally deposited, except in the presence, or with the sanction, of the appropriate officer, or under the proper authority for their delivery, | any person so removing them shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 314two lakh Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | Chapter XI |
| 62. If any person illegally takes any goods out of any warehouse without payment of duty, or aids, assists or is otherwise concerned therein, | 315such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding twice the value of the goods, and upon conviction by a Magistrate shall further be liable to rigorous imprisonment for a term not less than three months but not exceeding two years 316and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation | Chapter XI |
| 63. If any person contravenes any rule relating to transhipment or tranships goods not allowed to be transhipped, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 317two lakh Taka; and any goods in respect of which such offence has been committed shall also be liable to confiscation. | 121 |
| 64. If any person contravenes any rules or condition relatable to section 128 or section 129, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 318two lakh Taka; and any goods in respect of which such offence has been committed shall also be liable to confiscation. | 128 & 129 |
| 65. If any goods be taken on board any conveyance at any customs-station in contravention of section 130, | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 319two lakh Taka. | 130 |
| 66. If any goods not specified in a duly-passed bill of export or not permitted to be exported are taken on board any conveyance, contrary to the provisions of section 131, | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 320two thousand five hundred Taka for every package of such goods. | 131 |
| 32166A. If an exporter refuses or fails to fulfil the conditions or, as the case may be, the terms of guarantee or undertaking or to submit the documents or documentary evidences required to be fulfilled or submitted under section 131, | he shall be liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred thousand Taka for every month or part thereof during which the default has continued and to pay to the appropriate officer an amount equal to the amount of the sale proceeds of the goods exported if such proceeds are not remitted to Bangladesh within a period of six months from the date of the export of the goods, and the amount so paid shall be liable to confiscation. | 131 |
| 67. If any goods specified in the manifest of any conveyance or in any bill of export are not duly put on board before the departure of such conveyance, or are re-landed and notice of such short loading or re-landing be not given as required by section 134, | the owner of such goods shall be liable to penalty not exceeding 322five thousand Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 134 |
| 68. If any goods duly put on board any conveyance be landed, except under section 135, 136, or 137, at any place other than that for which they have been cleared, | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall, unless the landing be accounted for to the satisfaction of the appropriate officer, be liable to a penalty not exceeding three times the value of the goods so landed. | 135, 136 & 137 |
| 69. If any goods on account of which drawback has been paid be not found on board any conveyance referred to in section 136, | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall, unless the fact be accounted for to the satisfaction of the appropriate officer, be liable to a penalty not exceeding the value of such goods. | 136 |
| 70. If the owner of any baggage fails to make a correct declaration of its contents or refuses to answer any questions put to him by the appropriate officer with respect to his baggage or any of its contents including articles carried with him or fails to produce the baggage or any such article for examination, | such owner shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding three times the value of the goods in respect of which no declaration or incorrect declaration has been made or in respect of which he refuses or fails to answer any question, or which he fails to produce for examination; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 139 |
| 71. If any consignor in relation to coastal goods fails to make an entry thereof in the prescribed bill as required under section 147, or while presenting such bill fails to make and subscribe to declaration as to the truth of the contents of such bill. | such consignor shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 323two lakh Taka. | 147 |
| 72. If in the case of any coasting vessel the provisions of sections 148, 149, 150, 151, 152 and 153 are not complied with, | the master of the vessel shall in each case be liable to a penalty not exceeding 324twenty five thousand Taka. | 148 to 153 |
| 73. (i) If the master of any coasting vessel fails correctly to keep, or to cause to be kept the cargo book, or to produce the same on demand; or | the master shall in each case be liable to a penalty not exceeding 325twenty thousand Taka. | 151 |
| (ii) if at any time there be found on board any such vessel any goods not entered in such book as laden, or any goods noted as delivered; or- | ||
| (iii) if any goods entered as laden, and not noted as delivered, be not on board, | ||
| 74. If any person contravenes the provisions of section 155 or aids in or abets such contravention, | such person shall, except where any fine has been expressly provided for the violation of the prohibition or restriction in the law that imposes it, be liable to a penalty not exceeding 326twenty thousand Taka; and the goods in respect of which such contravention is committed shall also be liable to confiscation. | 155 |
| 75. If any rule which prevents or regulates the taking of any coastal goods out of Bangladesh is contravened, | the master of the vessel carrying such goods shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 327two lakh Taka, and where such contravention results in the loss of any customs-duty he shall further be liable to a penalty not exceeding three times such duty; and the goods in respect of which such contravention is committed shall also be liable to confiscation. | 155 |
| 76. (i) If, contrary to the provisions of this Act or any other law for the time being in force, any goods are laden on board any vessel in any customs-port or carried coast-wise; or | the master of such vessel shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 328twenty thousand Taka; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | Chapter XVI |
| (ii) if any goods which have been brought coast-wise are so unladen in any such port; or | ||
| (iii) if any goods are found on board any coasting vessel without being entered in the manifest or cargo book, as the case may be, of such vessel, | ||
| 77. (i) If any person makes, signs or uses, or causes to be made, signed or used, any declaration, statement or document in the transaction of any business relating to the customs, knowing or having reason to believe that such declaration, statement or document is false in any material particular; or counterfeits, falsifies or fraudulently alters or destroys any such document, or any seal, signature, initials or other mark made or impressed by any officer of Customs in the transaction of any business relating to the customs; or | such person shall, on conviction of any such offence before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 329five years, or to fine, or to both. | General |
| (ii) being required under this Act to produce any document, refuses or neglects to produce such document; or |
| (iii) being required under this Act to answer any question put to him by an officer of Customs, does not correctly answer such question, | ||
| 78. If any person on board any conveyance in any customs-station or who has landed from any such conveyance, upon being asked by an officer of Customs whether he has dutiable or prohibited goods about his person or in his possession, declares that he has not, and if any such goods are, after such denial, found about his person or in his possession, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding three times the value of such goods; and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | General |
| 79. (i) If any officer of Customs requires any person to be searched for dutiable or prohibited goods, or any documents connected with such goods, or to be detained, without having reasonable ground to believe that he has such goods or documents about his person; or | such officer shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to a fine not exceeding 330fifty thousand Taka. | 158 |
| (ii) arrests any person without having reasonable ground to believe that he has been guilty of an offence relating to customs, | ||
| 80. If, save for good and sufficient cause, any conveyance having been summoned under section 164 to stop fails to do so, | the person-in-charge of such conveyance shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 331fifty thousand Taka; and such conveyance shall also be liable to confiscation. | 164 |
| 81. If any officer of Customs, or other person duly employed for the prevention of smuggling, is guilty of a wilful breach of the provisions of this Act, | such officer or person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years, or to fine, or to both. | General |
| 82. If any officer of Customs, or other person duly employed for the prevention of smuggling, practises, or attempts to practise, any fraud for the purpose of injuring the customs-revenue, or abets or connives at any such fraud, or any attempt to practise any such fraud, | such officer or person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years, or to fine, or to both. | General |
| 83. If any police-officer, whose duty it is, under section 170, to send a written notice or cause goods to be conveyed to a custom-house, neglects so to do, | such officer shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to a penalty not exceeding 332five thousand Taka. | 170 |
| 84. If, in relation to any goods imported or intended to be exported by land, an order permitting clearance under section 83 or section 131 is not produced, | the person concerned shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 333fifty thousand Taka, and such goods shall also be liable to confiscation. | 83 & 131 |
| 85. If any person knowingly- (a) obstructs, hinders, molests or assaults any person duly engaged in the discharge of any duty or the exercise of any power imposed or | such person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to a fine of 334fifty thousand Taka and to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years. | General |
| conferred on him by or under any of the provisions of this Act or any person acting in his aid; or | ||
| (b) does anything which impedes, or is calculated to impede, the carrying out of any search for anything liable to confiscation under this Act, or the detention, seizure or removal of any such thing; or | ||
| (c) rescues, damages or destroys anything so liable to confiscation or does any thing calculated to prevent the procuring or giving of evidence as to whether or not anything is so liable to confiscation; or | ||
| (d) prevents the detention of any person by a person duly engaged or acting as aforesaid, or rescues any person so detained; or | ||
| (e) attempts to do any of the aforementioned acts or things, or who aids or abets, or attempts to aid or abet, the doing of any of them, | ||
| 86. If any person, having knowledge of the commission of any offence under this Act or of an attempt or likely attempt to commit any such offence, fails to give information in writing to the | such person shall, on Conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term which may extend to one year, or to a fine not exceeding 335fifty thousand Taka or to both. | 192 |
| officer-in-charge of the nearest custom-house or customs-station, or if there be no customs-house or custom-station at a reasonably convenient distance to the officer-in-charge of the nearest police-station, | ||
| 87. (i) If any officer of Customs, except in the discharge in good faith of his duty as such officer, discloses any particulars learnt by him in his official capacity in respect of any goods; or | such officer shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to a fine not exceeding 336fifty thousand Taka. | 199 |
| (ii) if any officer of Customs, except as permitted by this Act, parts with the possession of any samples delivered to him in his official capacity, | ||
| 88. If any person not holding a licence granted under section 207 acts as an agent for the transaction of business as therein mention, | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 337twenty thousand Taka. | 207 |
| 89. If any person without lawful excuse, the proof of which shall be on such person, acquires possession of, or is in any way concerned in carrying, removing, depositing, harbouring, keeping or concealing, or in any manner dealing with | if the value of such goods does not exceed 338fifty thousand Taka, such goods shall be liable to confiscation and any person concerned in the offence shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding ten times the value of the goods; and if the value of such goods | General |
| smuggled goods or any goods with respect to which there may be reasonable suspicion that they are smuggled goods; Provided that if the smuggled goods be gold bullion or silver bullion the onus of proving the plea that such bullion was obtained by processing or other means employed in Bangladesh and not smuggling shall be upon the person taking that plea, | exceeds 339fifty thousand Taka he shall further be liable, upon conviction by a Magistrate, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 340ten years and to a fine not exceeding ten times the value of such goods 341 *. | |
| 90. If any person, without lawful excuse, the proof of which shall be on such person, acquires possession of, or is in any way concerned in carrying, removing, depositing, harbouring, keeping or concealing, or in any manner dealing with any goods, not being goods referred to in clause 89, which have been unlawfully removed from a warehouse, or which are chargeable with a duty which has not been paid, or with respect to the importation or exportation of which there is a reasonable suspicion that any prohibition or restriction for the time being in force under or by virtue of this Act has been contravened, or if any person | such goods shall be liable to confiscation and any person concerned shall also be liable to a penalty not exceeding 342five times the value of the goods. | General |
| is in relation to any such goods in any way, without lawful excuse, the proof of which shall be on such person, concerned in any fraudulent evasion or attempt at evasion of any duty chargeable thereon, or of any such prohibition or restriction as aforesaid or of any provision of this Act applicable to those goods. | ||
| 91. If any Person, without lawful excuse, the proof of which shall be on such person, brings into Bangladesh, or is in any way concerned with the bringing into Bangladesh or who has in his possession, any bill-heading or other paper appearing to be a heading or blank, capable of being filled up and used as an invoice, purporting to be made out by or on behalf of a person or firm other than the one from whose possession the bill-heading or other paper has been recovered, or who has brought it into Bangladesh, or on whose behalf it has been brought into Bangladesh, | such person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year, or to a fine not exceeding 343fifty thousand Taka, or to both. | General |
| 92. Any person who bears himself in disguise or, being armed with an offensive weapon, intimidates any person duly engaged in the discharge of | such person shall be liable, on conviction before a Magistrate, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 344five years 345 *. | General |
| any duty or the exercise of any power imposed or conferred on him by or under any of the provisions of this Act or any person acting in his aid or uses such weapon against any person- | ||
| (a) while he is concerned in the movement, carriage or concealment of any goods with the intent of violating any prohibition or restriction on the importation or exportation thereof imposed by this or any other Act or with the intent of passing such goods without paying the duty chargeable thereon or without giving security for its payment; or | ||
| (b) while in possession of any goods liable to confiscation under this Act, | ||
| 93. If any person, by any means, makes any signal or transmits any message from any part of Bangladesh or from any ship or aircraft for the information of a person in any ship or aircraft, or across the frontier, being a signal or message connected with the smuggling or intended smuggling of goods into or out of Bangladesh, whether or not the person for whom the signal or message intended is in a position to receive it or is actually engaged at the time in smuggling goods, | such person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 346five years, or to a fine not exceeding 347fifty thousand Taka, or to both; and any equipment or apparatus used for sending the signal or message shall also be liable to confiscation. | General |
| Explanation.- If in any proceedings under this clause, any question arises as to whether any signal or message was such a signal or message as aforesaid, the burden of proof shall lie upon the defendant. | ||
| 94. If within the limits of Bangladesh, any person deposits, places or carries, or causes to be deposited, placed or carried in, through or into any building within one mile of the frontier between Bangladesh and any foreign country, or in, through or into any premises connected with any such building, any dutiable goods on which duty has not been paid, or any goods imported in contravention of any of the provisions of this Act or any other law, | such person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 348five years, or to a fine not exceeding 349fifty thousand Taka or to both. | General |
| 95. If, within one mile of the frontier between Bangladesh and any foreign country, any building is generally used for storage of imported goods and any such goods are seized from such building and confiscated according to law, | such building shall be liable to confiscation. | General |
| 96. If any person, being an importer or exporter of goods, other than for bona | such person shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding 350one hundred thousand Taka. |
| fide private or personal purposes, fails to maintain accounts in such form as may be notified by the Board, or for the period specified in section 211, | 211 | |
| 97. If any person contravenes any of the provisions of a notification under section 212 or of the rules regulating business connected with gold or silver or precious stones or ornaments made of gold or silver or precious stones within fifteen miles of the frontier of Bangladesh, | such person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years, and to a fine not exceeding 351one hundred thousand Taka. | 212 |
| 98. lf any person obstructs an officer acting in the exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (2) of section 189, | such person shall, on conviction before a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or to fine, or to both. | 189 |
| Explanation.- For the purposes of any penal provisions of this Act, the offence of contravening, in respect of any goods, any of the provisions of this Act or the rules or any other law for the time being in force, shall be deemed to have been committed when, in the case of import, any vessel containing such goods arrives within twelve nautical miles of the sea coast of Bangladesh (each nautical mile measuring six thousand and eighty feet) or when, in the case of export, such goods have been loaded on any conveyance for transport to any destination outside Bangladesh, or when, in either case, the connected customs documents have been presented to the appropriate officer. | Explanation.- For the purposes of any penal provisions of this Act, the offence of contravening, in respect of any goods, any of the provisions of this Act or the rules or any other law for the time being in force, shall be deemed to have been committed when, in the case of import, any vessel containing such goods arrives within twelve nautical miles of the sea coast of Bangladesh (each nautical mile measuring six thousand and eighty feet) or when, in the case of export, such goods have been loaded on any conveyance for transport to any destination outside Bangladesh, or when, in either case, the connected customs documents have been presented to the appropriate officer. | |
| Explanation.- For the purposes of any penal provisions of this Act, the offence of contravening, in respect of any goods, any of the provisions of this Act or the rules or any other law for the time being in force, shall be deemed to have been committed when, in the case of import, any vessel containing such goods arrives within twelve nautical miles of the sea coast of Bangladesh (each nautical mile measuring six thousand and eighty feet) or when, in the case of export, such goods have been loaded on any conveyance for transport to any destination outside Bangladesh, or when, in either case, the connected customs documents have been presented to the appropriate officer. |
| (2) Where currency, gold, silver, precious stones, ornaments or other manufactures of gold, silver or precious stones, or any other goods which the Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, specify are seized under this Act in the reasonable behalf that an act to defraud the Government of any duty payable thereon or to evade any prohibition or restriction for the time being in force by or under this Act has been committed in respect of such goods, or that there is intent to commit such act, the burden of proving that no such act has been committed or there was no such intent shall be on the person from whose possession the goods were seized. | |
| 352(3) Where there is provision in sub-section (1) for conviction and sentence by a Court for any offence, the Customs Authorities shall be competent to dispose of the goods as per the provisions of this Act, and the jurisdiction of the Court shall be limited only to the criminal proceedings instituted in relation to the goods. 353(4) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V of 1898) or in any other law for the time being in force, the Customs Authorities may sell or otherwise dispose of the seized goods during pendency of the Court proceedings, if any, after keeping samples, where practicable, with proper identification marks and if it is decided by the Court that no offence was committed, the Customs Authorities shall, where the owner or proper claimant is available, return the goods or the sale proceeds of the goods or the proceeds if they are not otherwise liable to be confiscated. 354(5) An appropriate officer of customs may inquire into or investigate any offence under this Act, and such officer, while conducting inquiry or investigation, may exercise any of the powers of a Sub-Inspector of Police and follow the procedures as laid down in the Code of Criminal Procedure,1898. |
| | |
(1) Confiscation of any goods under this Act includes any package in which they are found, and all other contents thereof.
(2) Every conveyance of whatever kind used in the removal of any goods liable to confiscation under this Act shall also be liable to confiscation:
355Provided that, where a conveyance liable to confiscation has been seized by an officer of Customs, 356an officer not below the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Customs may, in such circumstances as may be prescribed by rules, order its release, pending the adjudication of the case involving its confiscation, if the owner of the conveyance furnishes him,-(3) Confiscation of any vessel under this Act includes her tackle, apparel and furniture.
(1) The appropriate officer, if he has reason to believe that any person is carrying about himself goods liable to confiscation or any documents relating thereto, may search such person, if he has landed from or is on board or is about to board a vessel within the Bangladesh customs-waters, or if he has alighted from or is about to get into or is in any other conveyance arriving in or proceeding from Bangladesh, or if he is entering or about to leave Bangladesh, or if he is within the limits of any customs-area.
(2) Without prejudice to the provisions of sub-section (1) the appropriate officer may search a person, if he has reason to believe that such person is carrying about himself smuggled Platinum, any radio active mineral, gold, silver, precious stones, manufactures of Platinum, any radio active mineral, gold, silver or precious stones, or currency, or any other goods or class of goods notified by the Government in the official Gazette, or any documents relating to any one or more of the aforementioned goods.
(1) When any officer of Customs is about to search any person under the provisions of section 158, the officer of Customs shall inform such person about his right to be taken to a gazetted officer of Customs or Magistrate, and if such person so desires take him without unnecessary delay to the nearest gazetted officer of Customs or Magistrate before searching him, and may detain him until he can be so taken.
(2) The gazetted officer of Customs or the Magistrate before whom such person is brought shall, if he sees no reasonable ground for search, forthwith discharge the person and record reasons for doing so, or else direct search to be made.
(3) Before making a search under section 158, the officer of Customs shall call upon two or more persons to attend and witness the search and may issue an order in writing to them or any of them so to do, and the search shall be made in the presence of such persons and a list of all things seized in the course of such search shall be prepared by such officer or other person and signed by such witnesses.
(4) A female shall not be searched except by a female.
(1) Where the appropriate officer has reason to believe that any person liable to search under section 158 has any goods liable to confiscation secreted inside his body, he may detain such person and produce him without unnecessary delay before an officer of Customs not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of Customs.
(2) The aforesaid officer, if he has reasonable grounds for believing that such person has any such goods secreted inside his body and that it is necessary to have the body of such person screened or X-Rayed, may make an order to that effect, or else discharge such person forthwith, except where he is held on any other grounds.
(3) Where the aforesaid officer orders such person to be screened or X-Rayed, the appropriate officer shall, as soon as practicable, take him to a radiologist possessing such qualifications as may be recognised by the Government for that purpose and such person shall allow the radiologist to screen or X-Ray his body.
(4) The radiologist shall screen or X-Ray the body of such person and forward his report thereon, together with any X-Ray pictures taken by him to the aforesaid officer without unnecessary delay.
(5) Where on the basis of a report from a radiologist or otherwise, the aforesaid officer is satisfied that any person has any goods liable to confiscation secreted inside his body, he may direct that suitable action for bringing such goods out of his body be taken on the advice and under the supervision of a registered medical practitioner and such person shall be bound to comply with such direction:
Provided that in the case of a female no such action shall be taken except on the advice and under the supervision of a female registered medical practitioner.
(6) Where any person is brought before an officer of Customs not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of Customs as aforesaid, he may direct that pending completion of all action under this section such person be detained.
(7) No person shall be subjected to screening or X-Ray if he confesses that goods liable to confiscation are secreted inside his body and of his own consent agrees to suitable steps being taken to bring out such goods.
(1) Any officer of Customs authorised in this behalf who has reason to believe that any person has committed an offence under this Act may arrest such person.
(2) Any person duly empowered for the prevention of smuggling who has reason to believe that any person who has committed an offence of smuggling under this Act may arrest such person.
(3) Every person arrested under this Act shall be taken forthwith before the nearest officer of Customs authorised by the Commissioner of Customs to deal with such cases, or, if there is no such officer of Customs within a reasonable distance, to the Officer-in-Charge of the nearest police-station.
(4) The officer of Customs or the Officer-in-Charge of a police-station before whom any person is taken under this section shall, if the offence be bailable, either admit him to bail to appear before the Magistrate having jurisdiction or have him taken in custody before such Magistrate.
(5) When any person is taken under sub-section (4) before an officer of Customs as aforesaid, such officer shall proceed to inquire into the charge against such person.
(6) For the purpose of an inquiry under sub-section (5), the officer of Customs may exercise the same powers, and shall be subject to the same provisions, as an Officer-in-Charge of a police-station may exercise and is subject to under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act No. V of 1898), when investigating a cognizable offence:
Provided that, if the officer of Customs is of opinion that there is sufficient evidence or reasonable ground of suspicion against the accused person, he shall, if the offence be bailable, either admit him to bail to appear before a Magistrate having jurisdiction, or have him taken in custody before such Magistrate.
(7) If it appears to the officer of Customs that there is no sufficient evidence or reasonable ground of suspicion against the accused person, he shall release the accused person on his executing a bond, with or without sureties as the officer may direct, to appear, if and when so required, before the Magistrate having jurisdiction and shall make a full report of the case to his immediate superior.
(1) Any Magistrate may, on application by a gazetted officer of Customs stating the grounds of his belief that goods liable to confiscation or documents or things which in his opinion will be useful as evidence in any proceeding under this Act are secreted in any place within the local limits of the jurisdiction of such Magistrate, issue a warrant to search for such goods, documents or things.
(2) Such warrant shall be executed in the same way, and shall have the same effect, as a search-warrant issued under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act No. V of 1898).
(1) Whenever any officer or customs not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of Customs or any other officer 360 * employed for the prevention of smuggling has reasonable grounds for believing that any goods liable to confiscation or any documents or things which in his opinion will be useful for or relevant to any proceeding under this Act are concealed or kept in any place and that there is a danger that they may be removed before a search can be effected under section 162, he may, after preparing a statement in writing of the grounds of his belief and of the goods, documents or things for which search is to be made, search or cause of search to be made for such goods, documents or things in that place.
(2) Any officer or person who makes a search or causes a search to be made under sub-section (1) shall leave a signed copy of the aforementioned statement in or about the place searched and shall, at the time the search is made or as soon as is practicable thereafter, deliver furthermore a signed copy of such statement to the occupier of the place at his last known address.
(3) All searches made under this section shall be carried out mutatis mutandis in accordance with the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act No. V of 1898).
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained in the foregoing sub-sections and subject to previous authorisation by an officer of Customs not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of Customs, any officer of Customs or any person duly empowered as such may, with respect to an offence 361of smuggling-
(5) The provisions of sub-section (4) shall apply only to the areas within five miles of the land frontier of Bangladesh, and within a five mile belt running along the sea coast of Bangladesh.
(6) No suit, prosecution or other legal proceeding shall be instituted, except with the previous sanction in writing of the Government, against any person in respect of anything done or purporting to be done in exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) or, in the areas specified in sub-section (3), by sub-section (4).
(1) Where the appropriate officer has reason to believe that within the territories of Bangladesh (including territorial waters) any conveyance has been, is being, or is about to be, used in the smuggling of any goods or in the carriage of any smuggled goods, he may at any time stop any such conveyance or, in the case of an aircraft, compel it to land, and-
(2) Where in the circumstances referred to in sub-section (1)-
(1) The appropriate officer may, during the course of an inquiry in connection with the smuggling of any goods,-
(2) The appropriate officer shall exercise the powers in sub-section (1) only in relation to a person who is readily available or present before him and shall be subject to the same provisions as an Officer-in-Charge of a police-station is subject to under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act No. V of 1898), when investigating a cognizable offence.
(1) Any gazetted officer of Customs shall have power to summon any person whose attendance he considers necessary either to give evidence or to produce a document or any other thing in any inquiry which such officer is making in connection with the smuggling of any goods.
(2) A summon to produce documents or other things may be for the production of certain specified documents or things or for the production of all documents or things of a certain description in the possession or under the control of the person summoned.
(3) All persons so summoned shall be bound to attend either in person or by an authorised agent, as such officer may direct; and all persons so summoned shall be bound to state the truth upon any subject respecting which they are examined or make statement and produce such documents and other things as may be required:
Provided that the exemption under section 132 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, shall be applicable to any requisition for attendance under this section.
(4) Every such inquiry as aforesaid shall be deemed to be judicial proceeding within the meaning of section 193 and section 228 of the 363Penal Code.
If any person liable to be arrested under this Act is not arrested at the time of committing the offence for which he is so liable, or after arrest makes his escape, he may at any time afterwards be arrested and dealt with in accordance with the provisions of sub-sections (3), (7) of section 161 as if he had been arrested at the time of committing such offence.
(1) The appropriate officer may seize any goods liable to confiscation under this Act, and where it is not practicable to seize any such goods, he may serve on the owner of the goods or any person holding them in his possession or charge an order that he shall not remove, part with, or otherwise deal with the goods except with the previous permission of such officer.
(2) Where any goods are seized under sub-section (1) and no show cause notice in respect thereof is given under section 180 within two months of the seizure of the goods, the goods shall be returned to the person from whose possession they were seized:
Provided that the aforesaid period of two months may, for reasons to be recorded in writing, be extended by the Commissioner of Customs by a period not exceeding two months.
(3) The appropriate officer may seize any documents or things which in his opinion will be useful as evidence in any proceeding under this Act.
(4) The person from whose custody any documents are seized under sub-section (3) shall be entitled to make copies thereof or take extracts therefrom in the presence of an officer of Customs.
(1) All things seized on the ground that they are liable to confiscation under this Act shall, without unnecessary delay, be delivered into the care of the officer of Customs authorised to receive the same.
(2) If there be no such officer at hand, all such things shall be carried to and deposited at the custom-house nearest to the place of seizure.
(3) If there be no custom-house within a convenient distance, such things shall be deposited at the nearest place appointed by the Commissioner of Customs for the deposit of things so seized.
(4) If the Commissioner of Customs or any other officer of Customs authorised by him in this behalf considers that any such things is perishable or liable to rapid deterioration, he shall immediately cause it to be sold in accordance with the provisions of section 201 and have the proceeds kept in deposit pending adjudication of the case 364:
Provided that where practicable samples of such things with proper identification marks may be kept for the purpose of any legal proceeding or for any other purpose of this Act.
(5) If on such adjudication the thing so sold is found not to have been liable to such confiscation, the entire sale proceeds, after necessary deduction of duties, taxes or dues as provided in section 201, shall be handed over to the owner.
(1) When any things liable to confiscation under this Act are seized by any police-officer on suspicion that they had been stolen, he may carry them to any police-station or Court at which a complaint connected with the stealing or receiving of such things has been made, or an inquiry connected with such stealing or receiving is in progress, and there detain such things until the dismissal of such complaint or the conclusion of such inquiry or of any trial thence resulting.
(2) In every such case the police-officer seizing the things shall send written notice of their seizure and detention to the nearest custom-house and immediately after the dismissal of the complaint or the conclusion of the inquiry or trial, he shall cause such things to be conveyed to and deposited at, the nearest custom house, to be there proceeded against according to law.
Provided that where it is not practicable to deliver such inventory at the time of seizure, it shall be delivered within a period of seven working days from the date of the seizure.
(1) Any officer of Customs duly authorised by the Commissioner of Customs or any other officer authorised by the Government in this behalf may detain any package, brought whether by land, air or sea into Bangladesh which he suspects to contain-
366(a) any newspaper or book as defined in the Printing Presses and Publications (Declaration and Registration) Act, 1973 (XXIII of 1973), orcontaining any treasonable or seditious matter, that is to say, any matter the publication of which is punishable under section 123A or section 124A, as the case may be, of the 367Penal Code, and shall forward such package to such officer as the Government may appoint in this behalf.
(2) Any officer detaining a package under sub-section (1) shall, where practicable, forthwith send by post to the addressee or consignee of such package notice of the fact of such detention.
(3) The Government shall cause the contents of such package to be examined, and if it appears to the Government that the package contains any such newspaper, book or other document, as aforesaid, it may pass such order as to the disposal of the package and its contents as it may deem proper, and, if it does not so appear, shall release the package and its contents unless the same be otherwise liable to seizure under any law for the time being in force:
Provided that any person interested in any package detained under the provisions of this section, may, within two months of the date of such detention, apply to the Government for release of the same, and the Government shall consider such application and pass such order thereon as it may deem to be proper:
Provided further that, if such application is rejected, the applicant may, within two months of the date of the order rejecting the application, apply to the 368High Court Division for release of the package or its contents on the ground that the package or the contents do not contain any such newspaper, book or other document.
(4) No order passed or action taken under this section shall be called in question in any Court save as provided in the second proviso to sub-section (3).
Explanation.- In this section “document” includes any writing, painting, engraving, drawing or photograph, or other visible representation.
Every application under the second proviso to sub-section (3) of section 172 shall be heard and determined, in the manner provided by sections 99D to 99F of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, by a special bench of the 370High Court Division constituted in the manner provided by section 99C of that Code.
The appropriate officer may require any person in charge of any goods which such officer has reason to believe to have been imported, or to be about to be exported by land from, or to, any foreign territory to produce the order made under section 83, permitting inward clearance of the goods or the order passing the bill of export made under section 131 permitting export of the goods:
Provided that nothing in this section shall apply to any imported goods passing from a foreign frontier to an inland customs-station by a route prescribed under clause (c) of section 9:
Provided further that the Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, direct that the provisions of this section shall not apply to any particular area adjoining foreign territory in relation to goods of any specified description or value.
If an officer of Customs or police or any member of the armed forces of Bangladesh has reasonable grounds for suspecting that any signal or message connected with smuggling or intention or designs of smuggling any goods into or out of Bangladesh is being or is about to be made or transmitted from any conveyance, house or place, he may board or enter such conveyance, house or place, and take such steps as are reasonably necessary to stop or prevent the making or transmission of the signal or message.
An officer of Customs not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of Customs may, if he so deems fit, station an officer of Customs in any factory or building used for commercial purposes and situated within five miles of the frontier of Bangladesh with the object of ensuring that the factory or building is not used in any way for the unlawful or irregular importation or exportation of goods and the officer so stationed shall have the power to inspect at all reasonable times the records of the factory or business carried on in the building and such other powers as may be prescribed by rules.
(1) This section shall apply to such areas adjacent to the frontier of Bangladesh as may, from time to time, be notified by the Board in the official Gazette.
371(2) In any area to which this section for the time being applies, no person shall have in his possession or control any such goods or class of goods in excess of such quantity or value as may from time to time be notified by the Government in the official Gazette, except under a permit granted by the Government in respect of the particular goods or class of goods, or by an officer authorised by the Government.If any two or more persons in company or found together and they or any of them, have goods liable to confiscation under this Act, every such person having knowledge of this fact is guilty of an offence and punishable in accordance with the provisions of this Act as if goods were found on such person.
| Type of cases | Designation of Officers | Jurisdiction and powers |
| (1) | (2) | (3) |
| I. Adjudication of cases involving confiscation of goods or imposition of penalty or both | (1) Commissioner of Customs or Commissioner of Customs (Bond) or Director General (Duty Exemption and Drawback) (2) Additional Commissioner of Customs (3) Joint Commissioner of Customs (4) Deputy Commissioner of Customs (5) Assistant Commissioner of Customs (6) Revenue Officer | (1) Value of goods exceeding Taka 40 (forty) lac (2) Value of goods not exceeding Taka 40 (forty) lac (3) Value of goods not exceeding Taka 30(thirty) lac (4) Value of goods not exceeding Taka 20(twenty) lac (5) Value of goods not exceeding Taka 10 (ten) lac (6) Value of goods not exceeding Taka 4 (four) lac |
| II. Adjudication of cases relating to Manifest clearance in custom-houses and customs-stations involving only imposition of penalty under item 24 of the Table under sub-section (1) of section 156. | Deputy Commissioner of Customs or Assistant Commissioner of Customs in charge of Manifest clearance in custom-houses or customs-stations, as the case may be. | Value of goods without limit.” । |
No order under this Act shall be passed for the confiscation of any goods or for imposition of any penalty on any person, unless the owner of the goods, if any, or such person-
Provided that the provisions of this section shall not apply to an order of confiscation of any goods or imposition of any penalty on any person passed in consequence of a request in writing of the owner of such goods or the person concerned to the effect that the offence is admitted and that the owner of such goods or the person concerned consents in writing to accept the order passed without issuing any show cause notice to him and without prejudice to his right of appeal against such order.
Explanation.- Any fine in lieu of confiscation of goods imposed under this section shall be in addition to any duty and charges payable in respect of such goods, and of any penalty that might have been imposed in addition to the confiscation of goods.
377(2) Nothing in this section shall apply to any goods the import of which is prohibited by or under any law.When any goods are confiscated under this Act they shall forthwith vest in the Government, and the officer who orders confiscation shall take and hold possession of the confiscated goods.
(1) If any conveyance actually departs without a port clearance or permission in writing or, in the case of a vessel, after having failed to bring-to when required at any station appointed under section 14, the penalty to which the person-in-charge of such conveyance is liable may be adjudged by the appropriate officer of any customs-station, to which such conveyance proceeds, or in which it for the time being is.
(2) A certificate in respect of such departure or failure to bring-to when required, purporting to be signed by the appropriate officer of the customs-station from which the conveyance is stated to have so departed, shall be prima facie proof of the fact so stated.
Any Magistrate for the time being empowered to try in a summary way the offences specified in sub-section (1) of section 260 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 may, if he thinks fit, on application in this behalf by the prosecution, try an offence under this Act except when the value of goods involved in such offences exceeds 378Taka five thousand in accordance with the provisions of sub-section (1) of section 262 and sections 263, 264 and 265 of that Code.
Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, and subject to the other provisions of this Act, any Magistrate of the first class specially empowered by the Government in this behalf may pass a sentence of imprisonment for a term exceeding 379five years and of fine exceeding 380ten thousand Taka for an offence under this Act.
(1) When any fine or penalty has been imposed, or while imposition of any fine or penalty is under consideration, in respect of any goods, such goods shall not be removed by the owner until such fine or penalty has been paid.
(2) When any fine or penalty has been imposed in respect of any goods, the appropriate officer may detain any other goods belonging to the same owner pending payment of such fine or penalty.
When any person is alleged to have committed an offence under this Act and any question arises whether he did any act or was in possession of anything with lawful authority or under a permit, licence or other document prescribed by or under any law for the time being in force, the burden of proving that he had such authority, permit, licence or other document shall lie on him.
Where any document is produced by any person under this Act or has been seized under this Act from the custody or control of any person, and such document is tendered by the prosecution in evidence against him, the Magistrate shall,-
(1) Upon the conviction of any person for the offence of smuggling, the Government may require him to exhibit in or outside, or both in and outside, his place of business, if any notices of such number, size and lettering, and placed in such positions and containing such particulars relating to the conviction as it may determine, and to keep them so exhibited continuously for a period not less than three months from the date of conviction; and if he fails to comply fully with the requirement he shall be deemed to have committed a further offence under this Act of the nature of the original offence for which he was convicted.
(2) If any person so convicted refuses or fails to comply fully with any such requirement, any officer authorised in that behalf by an order of the Government in writing may, without prejudice to any proceedings which may be brought in respect of any such refusal or failure, affix the notices in or outside, or both in and outside, the place of business of such person in accordance with the requirement of the Government in pursuance of sub-section (1).
(3) If, in any case the Government is satisfied that the exhibition of notices in accordance with the requirements of the provisions of sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) will not effectively bring the conviction to the notice of persons dealing with the convicted person, the Government may, in lieu of, or in addition to any such requirement, require the convicted person to exhibit for such period, not being a period less than three months, on such stationery used in his business as may be specified in the requirement, a notice placed in such position and printed in type of such size and form and containing such particulars relating to the conviction as may be specified in the requirement; and, if he fails to comply fully with the requirement, he shall be deemed to have committed a further offence under this Act of the nature of the original offence for which he was convicted.
If the Government is satisfied that it is necessary so to do, the conviction and the particulars relating to the conviction of any person for the offence of smuggling may be published in the official Gazette.
Imprisonment for any offence under this Act may, in the discretion of the Magistrate, be either simple or rigorous.
(1) Any person who comes to know of the commission of any offence under this Act, or any attempt or likely attempt to commit any such offence, shall, as soon as may be, give information thereof in writing to the officer-in-charge of the nearest custom-house or customs-station, or if there is no such custom-house or customs-station, to the Officer-in-Charge of the nearest police-station.
(2) The Officer-in-Charge of a police-station who receives any information mentioned in sub-section (1) shall as soon as possible communicate it to the officer-in-charge of the nearest custom-house or customs-station.
A. Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act regarding adjudication or disposal of any dispute as defined and mentioned in section 192C which may or may not be pending with concerned customs authority or customs and মূল্য সংযোজন কর appellate authorities, any importer or exporter 382 or Pre-shipment Inspection Agency concerned in such disputes may apply to the concerned authorities for the resolution of the dispute through the Alternative Dispute Resolution (hereinafter ADR) process in the manner as laid down in the following sections and rules made thereunder and resort to ADR must precede the completion of the procedures under adjudication or appeal provisions of the Act.
The ADR process as mentioned in this chapter shall come into force on such date and in such Custom house or Customs-station or Commissionerate as the Board may determine by notification in the official Gazette.
Applications received from the aggrieved importer or exporter 383or Pre-shipment Inspection Agency for ADR within this chapter, is to be processed and disposed of, according to the rules.
No civil or criminal action shall lie against any person involved with the ADR process under this chapter before any court, tribunal or authority for any action taken or agreement reached in good faith.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), the following disputes shall not be dealt with ADR, namely:-
(1) For the purpose of resolving a dispute in an alternative way the Board may appoint or select Facilitator as may be prescribed by rules.
(2) For the purpose of ADR the selection or appointment, 389fees, duties and responsibilities of the Facilitator shall be provided in the rules.
(3) The duties and responsibilities of the applicant-importer or exporter 390or Pre-shipment Inspection Agency for ADR shall be provided in the rules.
(4) Selection of officer for representing customs authorities in the ADR negotiation and his duties and responsibilities shall be provided in the rules.
For ADR of a dispute, referred to in section 192C, the concerned importer, or exporter 391or Pre-shipment Inspection Agency, as the case may be, may apply to the following authorities:
is to be submitted in such form and manner as may be prescribed in the rules, to the concerned Commissioner of Customs or adjudicating officer or Appellate authorities, as the case may be;
dispute under sections 179, 193 or 196 as the case may be, of this Act, to the concerned Commissioner of Customs or adjudicating officer, as the case may
be, in the manner prescribed in the rules, within ten working days from the date of issue of the concerned show cause notice or assessment order,
or demand notice, as the case may be; and
Provided that, if the court disposes any such writ petition with directions to any of the above authorities to settle the matter through ADR, then the authority shall settle the case accordingly, if not otherwise barred by law.
(1) If the application submitted for ADR, whether pending or new dispute relates to the same Customs House or Station, all formalities mentioned in this chapter including the negotiation and agreement or disagreement or resolution, as the case may be, of the dispute, is to be completed in a
period of maximum thirty working days from the date of submission of the application.
(2) For a pending dispute for which application is submitted to the Commissioner Appeal or Customs and মূল্য সংযোজন কর Appellate Tribunal or any Court, the duration for the above purposes mentioned in sub-section (1) shall be sixty working days from the date of submission of the application.
(1) A dispute may be resolved by an 392agreement, including commitment to pay the duty and taxes or refund the same, as the case may be, in the agreed time limit, and may be concluded either wholly or in part where both the parties to the dispute accept the points for determination of the facts or laws applicable to the facts in the dispute, and agree on a settlement.
(2) Where an agreement is concluded, either wholly or in part, between the applicant importer or exporter 393or Pre-shipment Inspection Agency and the Commissioner of Customs's representative, the facilitator shall record, in writing, the details of the agreement in the manner as may be prescribed by rules and shall communicate the same to the applicant, the concerned commissioner and the Board, within seven working days of the conclusion of the thirty or sixty days period, as the case may be.
(3) The recording of every such agreement shall provide for the terms of the agreement including any duty and tax payable or subject to refund, and such other matters as the facilitator may think fit to make the agreement effective.
(4) The agreement shall be signed by the applicant-importer or exporter, Commissioners’ representative and the facilitator.
(5) The agreement shall be void if it is subsequently found that it has been concluded by fraud or misrepresentation of facts.
(6) Where no agreement, whether wholly or in part, is reached, the facilitator shall communicate about such unsuccessful dispute resolution in writing to the applicant, the concerned commissioner and the Board within such period and in such manner as may be prescribed by rules.
(7) Upon an agreement being reached and communicated as provided herein, the usual process of recovery of dues, if any, payable to the Government or refund of money to the importer or exporter 394or Pre-shipment Inspection Agency or any other necessary action shall proceed in accordance with the applicable provisions of the applicable laws.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any other provisions of this Act where an agreement is concluded for ADR under this chapter, it shall be binding for both the parties and cannot be challenged in any appellate forum or court either by the applicant or by the customs authorities.
(2) Every order of agreement, passed under this chapter shall be conclusive as to the matters stated therein and no matter covered by such order shall, save as otherwise provided in this chapter, be reopened in any proceeding under this Act or under any other law for the time being in force.
395(3) If the dues, payable to either party as per agreement, are not paid and if the same including any penalty or interest for default in making payment of such sum, if not paid within one year, such sum may either be recovered or refunded with annually 10 percent interest, or as sums due to the Government under section 202 or the applicant under section 33 of this Act.(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any other provisions of this Act, where an agreement is not concluded fully or in part, the aggrieved importer or exporter 396or Pre-shipment Inspection Agency may, after completion of adjudication process, if pending, prefer an appeal to the respective
appellate authorities on the unresolved issue.
(2) Where a dispute under appeal, an application for ADR is made but agreement could not have been concluded within the period mentioned in section 192G or negotiation ended in disagreement, the ADR process shall automatically stand terminated and the original appeal shall be deemed to have been revived before the concerned appellate authority including any court from the day immediately after the date the ADR
process stands terminated and provisions contained in respective sections of the respective law shall, so far as may be, apply accordingly.
(3) In computing the period of limitations for filing appeal, the time elapsed between the filing of the application and the communication of the decision or order of the ADR by the facilitators to all the parties shall be excluded.
Provided that no such rectification which has the effect of enhancing any penalty or fine or requiring the payment of a greater amount of duty shall be made unless the person affected by such rectification has been given an opportunity of being heard in person or through a counsel or other person duly authorised by him.]
(2) Every appeal under this section, shall be in such form and shall be verified in such manner as may be specified by rules made in this behalf.
(1) The Commissioner (Appeal) shall give an opportunity to the appellant to be heard if he so desires.
(2) The Commissioner (Appeal) may, at the hearing of an appeal, allow the appellant to go into any ground of appeal not specified in the grounds of appeal, if the Commissioner (Appeal) is satisfied that the omission of that ground from the grounds of appeal was not wilful or unreasonable.
(3) The Commissioner (Appeal) may, after making such further inquiry as may be necessary, pass such order as he thinks fit confirming, modifying or annulling the decision or order appealed against:
Provided that an order enhancing any penalty or fine in lieu of confiscation or confiscating goods of greater value or reducing the amount of refund shall not be passed unless the appellant has been given a reasonable opportunity of showing cause against the proposed order:
Provided further that where the Commissioner (Appeal) is of opinion that any duty has not been levied or has been short-levied or erroneously refunded, no order requiring the appellant to pay any duty not levied, short levied or erroneously refunded shall be passed unless the appellant is given notice within the time-limit specified in section 168 to show cause against the proposed order.
(4) The order of the Commissioner (Appeal) disposing of the appeal shall be in writing and shall state the points for determination, the decision thereon and the reasons for the decision.
(5) On the disposal of the appeal, the Commissioner (Appeal) shall communicate the order passed by him to the appellant, the adjudicating authority and the Commissioner of Customs.]
400(6) The Commissioner (Appeal) shall dispose of the appeal within two years from the date of receipt thereof.(7) If the Commissioner (Appeal) fails to dispose of the appeal within the time specified in sub-section (6), the Board may, upon a request made by the Commissioner (Appeal), extend that period not exceeding 6 (six) months.
(8) If the appeal is not disposed of within the extended time specified in sub-section (7), the appeal shall be deemed to have been allowed.
(2) Any person aggrieved by any decision of the Review Committee may prefer an appeal to the Appellate Tribunal constituted under section 196.
(3) The Appellate Tribunal may, after making such enquiry as it considers necessary and after giving the Commissioner or his authorised representative, the local representative of the concerned pre-shipment inspection agency, and the importer an opportunity of being heard, if they so desire, pass such order as it thinks fit, including fixing the price of the subject goods for the purpose of final assessment.
(4) No fee shall be payable for an appeal under this section.
(1) Any person desirous of appealing under section 193 403or section 196A against any decision or order relating to any duty demanded in respect of goods which have ceased to be under the control of customs authorities or to any penalty levied under this Act shall, at the time of filing his appeal or if he is so permitted by the appellate authority at any later stage before the consideration of the appeal, deposit with the appropriate officer 404fifty per cent of the duty demanded or fifty per cent of the penalty imposed, or both, as the case may be:
Provided that such person may, instead of depositing 405the amount of the penalty as aforesaid, deposit only fifty percent thereof and furnish a guarantee from a scheduled bank for the due payment of the balance:
Provided further that where, in any particular case, the appellate authority is of the opinion that the deposit of duty demanded or 406penalty imposed will cause undue hardship to the appellant, it may dispense with such deposit, either unconditionally or subject to such conditions as it may deem fit to impose.
(2) If, upon an appeal it is decided that the whole or any portion of the aforesaid duty or penalty was not leviable, the appropriate officer shall return to the appellant such amount or portion as the case may be.
(1) The Board may of its own motion call for and examine the records of any proceedings under this Act for the purpose of satisfying itself as to the legality or propriety of any decision or order passed therein by an officer subordinate to it and may pass such orders as it thinks fit:
Provided that no order confiscating goods of greater value, or enhancing any fine in lieu of confiscation, or imposing or enhancing any penalty, or requiring payment of any duty not levied or short-levied shall be passed unless the person affected thereby has been given an opportunity of showing cause against it and of being heard in person or through a counsel or other person duly authorised by him.
(2) No record of any proceedings relating to any decision or order passed by an officer of Customs shall be called for and examined under sub-section (1) after the expiry of two years from the date of such decision or order.
[Power of High Court Division to require statement to be amended.- Omitted by section 40 of the Finance Act, 2000 (Act No. XV of 2000).]
(2) The High Court Division, in its judgment, may award any costs upon any party to the appeal.
(3) A copy of the judgment delivered under sub-section (1) shall, under the seal and signature of an officer of that Division, be sent to the Appellate Tribunal.
Notwithstanding that a reference has been made to the High Court Division, sums due to the Government as a result of an order passed under sub-section (1) of section 196B shall be payable in accordance with the order so passed.
In computing the period of limitation specified for an appeal or application under this Chapter, the day on which the notice of the order complained of was served, and if the party preferring the appeal or making the application was not furnished with a copy of the order when the notice of the order was served upon him, the time requisite for obtaining a copy of such order shall be excluded.
In this Chapter,-
(2) A person shall not be appointed as a member of the Customs, Excise and VAT Appellate Tribunal unless—
(3) The Government shall appoint one of the members of the Appellate Tribunal to be the President thereof, who is a member of the Board or holds the current charge of a member of the Board.
(1) Any person aggrieved by any of the following orders may appeal to the Appellate Tribunal against such order:-
(2) The Commissioner of Customs may, if he is of the opinion that an order passed by the Commissioner (Appeal) under section 193 as it stood immediately before the appointed day or under section 193A is not legal or proper, direct the proper officer to appeal on his behalf to the Appellate Tribunal against such order.
414(3) Every appeal under this section shall be filed within three months from the date on which the order sought to be appealed against is received by the Commissioner of Customs or, as the case may be, the other party preferring the appeal:Provided that the President of the Appellate Tribunal may, if he is satisfied that the appellant has not been able to file an appeal within the aforesaid period of three months due to reasonable grounds, allow it to be presented within a further period of two months.
(4) On receipt of notice that an appeal has been preferred under this section, the party against whom the appeal has been preferred may, notwithstanding that he may not have appealed against such order or any part thereof, file, within forty-five days of the receipt of the notice, a memorandum of cross objections verified in such manner as may be specified by rules made in this behalf against any part of the order appealed against and such memorandum shall be disposed of by the Appellate Tribunal as if it were an appeal presented within the time specified in sub-section (3).
(5) The Appellate Tribunal may admit an appeal or permit the filing of a memorandum of cross-objections after the expiry of the relevant period referred to in sub-section (3) or sub-section (4), if it is satisfied that there was sufficient cause for not presenting it within that period.
(6) An appeal to the Appellate Tribunal shall be in such form and shall be verified in such manner as may be specified by rules made in this behalf and shall, in the case of an appeal made on or after the appointed day, irrespective of the date of demand or 415duties, taxes and interest or of levy of penalty in relation to which the appeal is made, be accompanied by a fee of,-
Provided that no such fee shall be payable in the case of an appeal referred to in sub-section (2) or a memorandum of cross-objections referred to in sub-section (4).
420(7) The Appellate Tribunal shall dispose of the appeal 421within four years from the date of its receipt.(8) If the appeal is not disposed of within the time specified in sub-section (7), the appeal shall be deemed to have been allowed by the Appellate Tribunal.
(1) The Appellate Tribunal may, after giving the parties to the appeal, an opportunity of being heard, pass such orders thereon as it thinks fit, confirming, modifying or annulling the decision or order appealed against 422or may refer the case back to the authority which passed such decision or order with such directions as the Appellate Tribunal may think fit, for a fresh adjudication or decision, as the case may be, after taking additional evidence, if necessary.
(2) The Appellate Tribunal may, at any time within four years from the date of the order, with a view to rectifying any mistake apparent from the record, amend any order passed by it under sub-section (1) and shall make such amendments if the mistake is brought to its notice by the Commissioner of Customs or the other party to the appeal:
Provided that an amendment which has the effect of enhancing the assessment or reducing a refund or otherwise increasing the liability of the other party shall not be made under this sub-section, unless the Appellate Tribunal has given notice to him of its intention to do so and has allowed him a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
(3) The Appellate Tribunal shall send a copy of every order passed under this section to the Commissioner of Customs and the other party to the appeal.
(4) Save as otherwise provided in section 196D, orders passed by the Appellate Tribunal on appeal shall be final.
(1) The powers and functions of the Appellate Tribunal may be exercised and discharged by Benches constituted by the President from amongst the members thereof.
423(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-sections (3) and (4), a Bench shall consist of any two members.(3) Every appeal against a decision or order relating, among other things, to the determination of any question having a relation to the rate of duty of customs or to the value of goods for purposes of assessment shall be heard by a special Bench constituted by the President for hearing such appeals and such Bench shall consist of not less than two members.
(4) The President or any other member of the Appellate Tribunal authorised in this behalf by the President may, sitting singly, dispose of any case which has been allotted to the Bench of which he is a member where-
does not exceed one lakh Taka;
(5) If the members of a Bench differ in opinion on any point, the point shall be decided according to the opinion of the majority, if there is a majority; but if the members are equally divided, they shall state the point or points on which they differ and make a reference to the President who shall either hear the point or points himself or refer the case for hearing on such point or points by one or more of the other members of the Appellate Tribunal and such point or points shall be decided according to the opinion of the majority of these members of the Appellate Tribunal who have heard the case, including those who first heard it.
(6) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Appellate Tribunal shall have power to regulate its own procedure and the procedure of the Benches thereof in all matters arising out of the exercise of its powers or of the discharge of its functions, including the places at which the Benches shall hold their sittings.
(7) The Appellate Tribunal shall, for the purposes of discharging its functions, have the same powers as are vested in a Court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), when trying a suit in respect of the following matters, namely-
(8) Any proceeding before the Appellate Tribunal shall be deemed to be a judicial proceeding within the meaning of sections 193 and 228 and for the purpose of section 196 of the Penal Code (Act XLV of 1860) and the Appellate Tribunal shall be deemed to be a Civil Court for all the purposes of section 195 and Chapter XXVI of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (Act V of 1898).
(1) 424Where an appeal has been preferred to the High Court Division under section 196D, it shall be heard by a Bench of not less than two Judges of the High Court Division and shall be decided in accordance with the opinion of such Judges or of the majority, if any, of such Judges.
(2) Where there is no such majority, the Judges shall state the point of law upon which they differ and the case shall then be heard upon that point only by one or more of the other Judges of the High Court Division, and such point shall be decided according to the majority of the Judges who have heard the case including those who first heard it.
(1) Every appeal which is pending immediately before the appointed day before the Board under section 193 as it stood immediately before that day, and any matter arising out of or connected with such appeal and which is so pending shall stand transferred on that day to the Appellate Tribunal and the Appellate Tribunal may proceed with such appeal or matter from the stage at which it was on that day:
Provided that the appellant may demand that before proceeding further with that appeal or matter, he may be re-heard.
(2) Every proceeding which is pending immediately before the appointed day before the Government under section 196 as it stood immediately before that day, and any matter arising out of or connected with such proceeding and which is so pending shall stand transferred on that day to the Appellate Tribunal and the Appellate Tribunal may proceed with such proceeding or matter from the stage at which it was on that day as if such proceeding or matter were an appeal filed before it:
Provided that if any such proceeding or matter relates to an order where-
does not exceed ten thousand Taka such proceeding or matter shall continue to be dealt with by the Government as if the said section 196 had not been substituted:
Provided further that the applicant or the other party may make a demand to the Appellate Tribunal that before proceeding further with that proceeding or matter, he may be re-heard.
(3) Every proceeding which is pending immediately before the appointed day before the Board under section 193A or before the Government under section 196B as they stood immediately before that day, and any matter arising out of or connected with such proceeding and which is so pending shall continue to be dealt with by the Board or the Government, as the case may be, as if the said sections had not been substituted.
(4) Any person who immediately before the appointed day was authorised to appear in any appeal or proceeding transferred under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) shall, notwithstanding anything contained in section 196K, have the right to appear before the Appellate Tribunal in relation to such appeal or proceeding.]
(2) No person who has been dismissed from Government service shall be qualified to represent a person under sub-section (1); and if any Advocate or Customs Consultant 427or a Chartered Accountant is found guilty of misconduct in connection with any customs proceedings by the authority empowered to take disciplinary action against members of the profession to which he belongs, or if any other person is found guilty of such misconduct by the Commissioner of Customs, the Commissioner of Customs may direct that he shall be thenceforward disqualified to represent a person under sub-section (1):
Provided that-
Provided that no such order which has the effect of confiscating goods of greater value or, enhancing any fine in lieu of confiscation enhancing any penalty or requiring the payment of a greater amount of duty shall be made unless the person affected by such order has been given an opportunity of being heard in person or through a counsel or other person duly authorised by him.
The appropriate officer shall, for the purposes of this Act, have control over all conveyances and goods in a customs-area.
(2) For the purpose of identifying and evaluating the risks, and developing the necessary counter-measures thereof, the Customs control, including random check, shall primarily be based on risk analysis done by using electronic data-processing techniques, if available, according to the criteria developed at local, national or international level.
(3) The Board shall establish a Customs Risk Management Unit for conducting the overall customs risk management including automated risk management. For the purpose of conducting risk management in a coordinated manner with other government agencies managing international passenger traffic and controlling goods, cargo or transport a National Risk Targeting Center shall be created and managed by this Unit.
(4) For the purpose of this section, the Board may appoint required number of customs officers and staffs and, from time to time, formulate rules and operational procedures.
Explanations.¾For the purpose of this section, “Customs control” means measures applied by officers of customs to ensure compliance with this Act governing the import, export, transit, transfer and storage of goods and passengers including crew between Bangladesh and other countries or territories, and the presence and movements of consignments imported into, and exported from, Bangladesh and in transit.
For the purpose of this Act, the Board may, by general or special order published in the official gazette, form one or more specialized functional unit(s) to accomplish special functions, appoint required number of custom officers and specify duties, procedures and special allowances for those officers.]
(2) There may be a Commissionerate to be called the Bangladesh Single Window Commissionerate which shall be responsible for the operation of the Bangladesh Single Window.
(3) The Bangladesh Single Window Commissionerate shall consist of the Commissioner of Customs (Single Window) and other designated representative from the certificate, license and permit issuing agencies or bodies, as the case may be.
(4) The functions of the Bangladesh Single Window Commissionerate shall be determined by the Board by notification in the official Gazette.
(5) Any person intending to engage in import, export, warehousing, transit or transhipment of goods, shall submit data and documents electronically to the Bangladesh Single Window in such form and manner as may be prescribed by the Board.
(6) The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, constitute a Standing Committee with the following members, namely:—
(7) The Standing Committee formed under sub-section (6) shall supervise and coordinate the activities of the Bangladesh Single Window Commissionerate and give necessary advice to it.
(8) The Board may, by rules, prescribe the procedure, fees and other charges for the use of Bangladesh Single Window.
(1) The appropriate officer may, on the entry or clearance of any goods or at any time while such goods are being passed through the customs-area, take samples of such goods in the presence of the owner thereof or his agent, for examination or testing or for ascertaining the value thereof or for any other necessary purpose.
(2) After the purpose for which a sample was taken in carried out, such sample shall, if practicable, be restored to the owner, but if the owner fails to take delivery of the sample within one month of the date on which he is asked in writing to take its delivery, it may be disposed of in such manner as the Commissioner of Customs may direct.
(3) In the case of goods which consist of drugs or articles intended for consumption as food, and in respect of which the taking of samples for the purposes of this sub-section may have been authorised by a general or special order of the Government, the appropriate officer may also in like circumstances take samples thereof for submission to, and examination by such officer of Government or of a local authority as may be specified in such order.
437(4) The owner of any imported or exportable goods or his authorised representative may draw samples before presentation or transmission of bill of entry or bill of export thereof, as the case may be, subject to the conditions laid down by an officer of Customs not below the rank of Assistant Commissioner.Any opening, un-packing, waiving, measuring, re-packing, bulking, sorting, letting, marking, numbering, loading, unloading, carrying or lading of goods or their containers for the purposes of, or incidental to, the 438examination, including any investigation, scientific or chemical test or draft survey, by an officer of Customs, removal or warehousing thereof shall be done, and any facilities or assistance required for any such examination, investigation, test or survey shall be provided, by or at the expense of the owner of the goods.
(1) Where any goods, other than confiscated goods, are to be sold under any provision of this Act, they shall be sold after due notice to the owner by public auction or by tender or by private offer or, with the consent of the owner in writing, in any other manner.
(2) The sale proceeds shall be applied to the following purposes in their respective order, namely-
(3) The balance, if any, shall be paid to the owner of the goods, provided he applies for it within six months of the sale of the goods or shows sufficient cause for not doing so.
sale of excisable 443or Value Added Taxable goods or any plant, machinery and equipment used for the manufacture of goods or any other goods in the factory or bonded warehouse belonging to such person;
(2) If the amount is not recovered from such person in the manner provided in sub-section (1), the appropriate officer may prepare a certificate signed by him specifying the amount due from the person liable to pay the same and send it to the Collector 445of the district or to a certificate officer appointed under sub-section (3) in whose jurisdiction such person resides or owns any property or conducts his business and such Collector 446or certificate officer shall, on receiving the certificate, proceed to recover the amount specified in the certificate as a public demand or an arrear of land revenue.
447(3) The Government may appoint one or more officers to perform the functions of a certificate officer under the Public Demands Recovery Act, 1913(Ben. Act III of 1913) for the purpose of recovering the amount specified in a certificate prepared under sub-section (2); and when more than one certificate officers are so appointed the Government may also specify their territorial or other jurisdiction.The Commissioner of Customs may, from time to time, fix the period after the expiration of which goods left 448or detained in any custom-house, customs-area, wharf or other authorised landing place or part of the custom-house premises, shall be subject to payment of fees, and the amount of such fees.
A certificate or a duplicate of any certificate, manifest, bill or other customs' document may, 449on payment of such fee as the Board may determine for this purpose, be furnished, at the discretion of an officer of Customs not below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of Customs, to any person applying for the same, if the said officer is satisfied that no fraud has been committed or is intended to be committed by the applicant.
(2) The Government may enter into any bilateral, regional, multilateral agreement or convention or any other arrangement to exchange of information for trade facilitation, effective risk analysis, verification of compliance and prevention, combating and investigation of offences under the provisions of this Act.
(3) The information exchanged under sub-section (2), subject to the limitation and condition provided under the agreement or convention or any such arrangement, may be used as evidence in investigations and proceedings under this Act or corresponding law of another country by which such arrangement exists.
(4) The Board shall, by notification in the official Gazette, specify the procedure and conditions subject to which such exchange shall be made and designation of the person through whom such information shall be exchanged.
(5) Any disclosure, publishing or dissemination of information except as provided above without explicit permission shall be an offence.
Clerical or arithmetical errors in any decision or order passed by the Government, the Board or any officer of Customs under this Act, or errors arising therein from accidental slip or omission may, at any time, be corrected by the Government, the Board or such officer of Customs or his successor-in-office, as the case may be.
No person shall act as an agent for the transaction of any business relating to the entrance or departure of any conveyance or the import or export of goods or baggage at any customs-station unless such person holds a licence granted in this behalf in accordance with the rules.
(1) When any person applies to any officer of Customs for permission to transact any specified business with him on behalf of any other person, such officer may require the applicant to produce a written authority from the person on whose behalf such business is to be transacted, and in default of the production of such authority refuse such permission.
(2) The clerk, servant or agent of any person or mercantile firm may transact business generally at the custom-house on behalf of such person or firm:
Provided that the appropriate officer may refuse to recognize such clerk, servant or agent unless such person or a member of such firm identifies such clerk, servant or agent to the appropriate officer as empowered to transact such business, and deposits with the said officer an authority in writing duly signed, authorising such clerk, servant or agent to transact such business on behalf of such person or firm.
(1) Subject to the provisions of sections 207 and 208, anything which the owner of any goods is required or empowered to do under this Act may be done by any person expressly or impliedly authorised by the owner for the purpose.
(2) Where this Act requires anything to be done by the owner, importer or exporter of any goods, any such thing done by an agent, clerk or servant of the owner, import or exporter of any goods shall, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to have been done with the knowledge and consent of such owner, importer or exporter so that in any proceedings under this Act, the owner, importer or exporter of the goods shall also be liable as if the thing had been done by himself.
(3) When any person is expressly or impliedly authorised by the owner, importer or exporter of any goods to be his agent in respect of such goods for all or any of the purposes of this Act, such person shall, without prejudice to the liability of the owner, importer or exporter be deemed to be the owner, importer or exporter of such goods for such purposes:
Provided that where any duty is not levied or is short-levied or erroneously refunded on account of any reason other than wilful act, negligence or default of the agent, such duty shall not be recovered from the agent.
(1) Anything which the person-in-charge of a conveyance is required or empowered to do under this Act may, with the express or implied consent of the person-in-charge and the approval of the appropriate officer, be done by his agent.
(2) An agent appointed by the person-in-charge of a conveyance, and any person who represents himself to any officer of Customs as an agent of any such person-in-charge and is accepted as such by that officer, shall be liable for the fulfilment in respect of the matter in question of all obligations imposed on such person-in-charge by or under this Act or any law for the time being in force, and to penalties (including confiscation) which may be incurred in respect of that matter.
(2) Every such person must, as and when required by an officer of Customs,-
(3) Where for the purpose of complying with sub-section (2) of this section, information is recorded or stored by means of an electronic or other device, the licensee, importer, exporter, or its agent, shall, at the request of an officer of Customs, operate the device, or cause it to be operated, to fulfil the requirements of sub-section (2).
456(4) For the purposes of sub-section (2) and (3) the audit agencies appointed by the Government under section 25A and an employee of that agency shall be deemed to be the officers of Customs.The Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, regulate business in, or connected with, gold or silver or precious stones or ornaments made of gold or silver or precious stones, within fifteen miles of the frontier or coast line of Bangladesh.
If any person knowingly makes or brings into Bangladesh, or causes or authorises or is otherwise concerned in the making or bringing into Bangladesh of any invoice or paper used or intended to be used as an invoice for the purposes of customs, in which any goods are entered or charged at a price or value higher or lower than that actually paid or intended to be paid for them, or in which goods are falsely described, no sum of money shall be recoverable by such person, his representatives or assigns, for the price of such goods or any part thereof, nor shall any sum of money be recoverable upon any bill of exchange, note or other security made, given or executed for the whole or part of the price of such goods unless such bill of exchange, note or other security is in the hands of a bona fide holder for consideration without notice.
Where, on prosecution by the owner of any goods, an officer of Customs is convicted of an offence connected with the removal of such goods from the warehouse without payment of duty, the whole of the duty on such goods shall be remitted, and, the Commissioner of Customs shall, in accordance with the rules, pay to the owner due compensation for the damage caused to the owner by such offence.
Any order or decision passed or any summons or notice issued under this Act shall be served-
Provided that a copy or other copy or reproduction of the certified copy shall not be admissible as evidence or otherwise accepted in any Court of law.
(2) Upon an application of a person directly interested in a decision taken or omitted to have been taken by a Customs officer, the Commissioner of Customs shall inform that person in writing within a period of 60 days of the application the reasons for such decision or omission.
(2) On an application, including in electronic format, by an interested person, the enquiry point shall answer the enquiries and provide the forms and documents within a reasonable period and, in relevant cases, in electronic format.
No owner of goods shall be entitled to claim from any officer of Customs compensation for the loss of such goods or for damage done to them at any time while they remain or are lawfully detained in any custom-house, customs-area, wharf or landing place under the charge of any officer of Customs, unless it be proved that such loss or damage was occasioned by gross negligence or wilful act of such officer.
No suit, prosecution or other legal proceeding shall lie against the Government or any public servant for anything which is done or intended to be done in good faith in pursuance of this Act or the rules.
if such supply of information, the act of detection of or unearthing the evasion or attempted evasion of customs-duty or violation of law leads to:-
Provided that the collection of revenue at import stage for a given financial year exceeds the target of collection fixed by the Government for that financial year.
No proceeding in a Court other than a suit shall be commenced against any officer of Customs or any other person exercising any powers conferred or discharging any duties imposed by or under this Act for anything purporting to be done in pursuance of the provisions of this Act or the rules without giving to such officer or person a month's previous notice in writing of the intended proceeding and of the cause thereof; or after the expiration of one year from the actual of such cause.
(1) The Board may, by notification in the official Gazette, make rules for carrying out the purposes of this Act.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing provision, rules may be made on matters enumerated in the 464Third Schedule.
(3) No rules relating to matters enumerated at items 19 and 22 of the 465Third Schedule shall be made without previous approval of the Government in writing.
466*(5) All such rules for the time being in force shall be collected, arranged, and published at intervals not exceeding two years, and shall be sold to the public at a reasonable price.
(2) A customs ruling may be made within 468forty five working days of the receipt of the application or the reference, as the case may be.
(3) The Board may decline to make a customs ruling on the ground of insufficient information furnished or in the absence of conclusive evidence provided in support of the contentions in the application or the reference.
(4) The rulings made by the Board shall be binding upon the concerned persons and officers.
(5) The Board may from time to time review and amend a customs ruling to correct any error contained in that ruling.
The enactments specified in the 469Fourth Schedule are repealed or amended to the extent specified respectively in columns three and four thereof.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in section 6 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 (X of 1897), anything done or any action taken under the repealed enactments in so far as it is not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act shall without prejudice to anything already done or any action already taken be deemed to have been done or taken under this Act:
Provided that nothing in this Act shall be so construed as to have the effect of enhancing the punishment of an offence committed before the commencement of this Act:
Provided further that where the period of limitations for the submission of an application or the filing of an appeal or revision prescribed under any of the repealed enactments had expired or had begun to run before the commencement of this Act the provisions of those enactments shall continue to apply to such limitation.
(2) The provisions of the General Clauses Act, 1897 (X of 1897), in particular, section 6, section 8 and section 24 thereof, shall apply to the repeal and re-enactment of the said enactments by this Act, subject to the provision of sub-section (1).
(3) Nothing in this Act shall affect any law for the time being in force relating to the constitution and powers of the trustees of any port or other port authority.
If any difficulty arises in giving effect to the provisions of this Act, particularly in relation to the transition from the enactments repealed by this Act to the provisions of this Act, the Government may, by general or special order made during the period of one year from the commencement of this Act, direct such action to be taken as it considers necessary or expedient for the purpose of removing the difficulty.
Provided that in the event of conflict between the two texts, the original text shall prevail.