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Agriculture Minister Backs Criminalization of Food Smuggling

Alexander Tkachev Maxim Stulov / Vedomosti

Russia's Agriculture Minister Alexander Tkachyov has thrown his agency's weight behind a proposal to imprison those bringing banned foods illegally into the country, making them liable to the same penalties as those who smuggle drugs or weapons.

“Why not?” Tkachyov told state-owned Rossiya 24 television in a broadcast Sunday afternoon. ?€?Everywhere in the world, contraband [smugglers] are treated harshly, so if you have broken the rules, you will banned from entering the country for decades.?€?

?€?How could it be otherwise? We are protecting our people,?€? he said.

So far, food smugglers – those who violate Russia's embargo on Western food imports, which Moscow implemented in response to sanctions imposed for its role in the Ukraine crisis ?€“ only face administrative charges, such as fines, according to news reports.

But Russia's Federal Customs Service published a draft bill last week suggesting that banned foreign foods be listed as ?€?strategically important?€? — a label so far reserved for radioactive materials, poison, armaments and explosives. The re-classification would allow authorities to bring criminal charges, with prison terms of up to seven years, against individuals and companies involved in smuggling.

Tkachyov was the minister who initially proposed destroying banned food imports seized at the border ?€” a controversial measure that went into effect Aug. 6.

The government has remained determined in its drive to destroy banned food imports since then, ignoring calls to hand out the food to Russians impoverished by the economic crisis.

Hundreds of tons of fruit, cheese, meat and other products have been steamrolled, covered in bleach or burnt at the Russian border.

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