- Evasion of tax makes Esse cheap. One stick of smuggled Esse Lights costs ₹10, while a like-for-like slim Classic Connect stick costs ₹15 because of tax.
Sometime during the first few days of the covid pandemic-induced lockdown in March 2020, Vaibhav Gurang, who works for an advertising agency in Gurugram, had his first taste of Esse Lights, a brand of slim cigarettes made by KT&G, a South Korean company.
As the supply chain was disrupted and shops shut, Gurang’s friendly neighbourhood shopkeeper could only provide him with two packets of Marlboro Lights, his preferred brand, but sold him a carton of Esse as a backup.
Gurang exhausted the Marlboros in the first week, and as the lockdown extended, began smoking the Esses. Since then, he has been hooked. The brand's premium packaging and claim of low smell and tar content added to its appeal. "I was not a big fan of slim cigarettes but started smoking them out of compulsion. They cost less and have a significantly less bad odour. Since I got used to Esse, I have not missed Classic or Marlboro," he says.
What Gurang and possibly his trusted supplier do not know is that the cigarettes are smuggled into the country through sometimes brazen and, other times, highly sophisticated methods. Earlier this month, for instance, a team from the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence's (DRI) Mumbai zonal unit intercepted shipping containers at Navi Mumbai's Jawaharlal Nehru Port port in Nava Sheva. They were arriving from Dubai's Port of Jebel Ali, and supposed to contain Chinese viscose-woven carpets. Instead, the team found one of the containers was stuffed with 6.72 million Esse Change cigarettes, worth ₹10.08 crore. The other container had 325 rolls of old, used carpets as cover cargo to hoodwink customs officials.
Bu hikaye Mint Mumbai dergisinin January 18, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Mint Mumbai dergisinin January 18, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Retirement Ready? Here Are Some Essential Tips For Financial Security
57% of urban Indians worry their retirement savings will deplete within a decade
PAN 2.0 must aim to end fraud via impersonation
It's welcome that tax authorities are simplifying processes for holders of permanent account numbers. The tech overhaul should also ensure sufficient checks to minimize PAN-theft fraud
Capturing the vintage romance of Havana
The photographs focus on the resilience of Cubans—of keeping music, dance, and laughter alive in the face of various challenges
A treasure trove of recipes from Jahangir's royal kitchen
Food historian Salma Yusuf Husain has translated a 17th century Persian manuscript with 120 rare recipes
Eye contact at meetings must get the attention it needs
Remote work is here to stay but virtual meeting platforms have not addressed their key point of inferiority
Economic advice for Trump and Powell: First, do no harm
Policy moves should help sustain business dynamism in America
Internal audit: AI will transform it by staying vigilant in real time
Embracing tools of artificial intelligence will enable IA to play a vastly enhanced role in delivering value to organizations
We should fix the business of opinion polling in India
Pollsters need self-regulatory mechanisms that can set standards and ensure transparency
Resolving disputes over public procurement: Let's aim higher
It has been a pivotal year for reforms but India needs more to vie for leadership in dispute resolution
Are multi-asset funds a good option amid the market rally?
MAAFs are structured to invest in a mix of asset classes, offering diversification benefits