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Sources say that Ivory Coast Customs seizes 2,000 tons falsely declared cocoa bean.

Two customs sources, and one judicial resource, said that Ivory Coast customs seized around 2,050 metric tons (2,000 metric tonnes) of falsely-declared cocoa beans valued at around $19,000,000 in its main port Abidjan on Tuesday.

Cocoa, which is the main ingredient of chocolate, is smuggled across the western border between Ivory Coast and Guinea, where the traffickers pay more than the local farm gate price.

Last week, Ivorian Customs found that an exporter of cocoa had falsely declared to pay a lower tax at the port.

Customs officers familiar with the case said that 110 containers were seized, which according to the document should have contained rubber.

This is, to my knowledge the first time that we have made a seizure of this magnitude. "2,000 tons or 15 million pounds is a large amount," said another officer.

Taxes on this shipment would have been 19.5% including the 14.5% export tax and the 5% registration fee. The Ivorian government would have received 2.9 million pounds of taxes in this case.

The tax on rubber is just 1.5%.

Sources close to the judiciary said that this fraud could have been perpetrated due to high levels of corruption within the administration, and the complicity among various departments.

"We have seized the case... and are continuing to investigate." "We can't comment at this time," said a prosecutor who is close to the investigation. $1 = 0.7918 pound (Reporting and writing by Ange Aboua, Editing by David Evans).

(source: Reuters)