Categories · Cross-Border/Crime
non-USA, by Country · Europe
· Ukraine
· Poland
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Jump to full article: Bloomberg News, 2008-12-25 Author: Katya Andrusz
Intro: It’s Christmas in frozen eastern Poland, and Pawel Mlynarski is blaming the government for taking away his livelihood: contraband cigarettes.
Until recently, Mlynarski, a 25-year-old unemployed builder, would cross the border into Ukraine as many as four times a night. Each time, he would return with at least one carton of 200 cigarettes, or 10 packs, to sell in the bars of his hometown of Przemysl, 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the European Union’s eastern frontier.
Then, on Dec. 1, Poland cut the import allowance to 40 smokes, or two packs. “This is an absolute tragedy,” says Mlynarski, who used to make as much as 20 zloty ($6.80) per carton selling packs of Prima. “Most people around here did the border. It was our only way of earning decent cash.”
The new limits are a result of the EU’s expansion a year ago of its passport-free movement of people, the so-called Schengen area, to include Poland.
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