Categories · Cross-Border/Crime
non-USA, by Country · China
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Jump to full article: Slate, 2009-06-29 Author: Te-Ping Chen - Slate Magazine
Intro: On first approach, Yunxiao seems like any other Chinese backwater caught in an uneasy industrial transition. . . .
Ringed by thickly forested mountains, illicit cigarette factories dot the countryside, carved deeply into caves, high into the hills, and even buried beneath the earth. By one tally, some 200 operations are hidden in Yunxiao, a southwestern Fujian county about twice the area of New York City. Over the last 10 years, production of counterfeit cigarettes has soared in China, jumping eightfold since 1997 to an unprecedented 400 billion cigarettes a year—enough to supply every U.S. smoker with 460 packs a year. Once famed for its bright yellow loquat fruit, Yunxiao is the trade's heartland, the source of half of China's counterfeit production. . . .
But for U.S. consumers, inhaling the knockoff cigarettes may do even more damage than their genuine counterparts. Lab tests show that Chinese counterfeits emit higher levels of dangerous chemicals than brand-name cigarettes: 80 percent more nicotine and 130 percent more carbon monoxide, and they contain impurities that include insect eggs and human feces.
Slate V: Hunting Chinese cigarette pirates
Today, China's fake cigarettes—knockoff Marlboros, Newports, and Benson & Hedges—are flooding markets around the globe. They fuel a violent, multibillion-dollar black market and are even more hazardous to smokers than the real thing, yet the industry is little-known.
Jump to full article » Quotes from this article:
We locals would like to see Yunxiao start its own legal cigarette factory someday. Unidentified cigarette broker, in an unprecedented look into the multi-billion $ counterfeit trade in China's Yunxiao county.
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