Porsche pummeled,
Corvettes crushed as Philippines' Duterte shows he's
tough on tax-dodging
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[February 06, 2018]
MANILA (Reuters) -
Bulldozers and backhoes pounded more than two dozen
seized luxury cars in the Philippines on Tuesday,
including Porsches, Mercedes, Jaguars and Corvettes, in
a dramatic demolition showcasing the no-nonsense
leader's crackdown on crime and corruption. |

A bulldozer destroys condemned smuggled luxury cars
worth 61,626,000.00 pesos (approximately US$1.2
million), which include used Lexus, BMW, Mercedes-Benz,
Audi, Jaguar and Corvette Stingray, during the 116th
Bureau of Customs founding anniversary in Metro Manila,
Philippines February 6, 2018. REUTERS/Romeo Ranoco |
President Rodrigo Duterte watched as the second-hand vehicles,
some valued as high as $115,000, were reduced to piles of scrap
in a little over three minutes.
"Give it to the buyer of steel," Duterte said, recalling his
instruction to officials.
"They cannot have cars like that. But they can get something,
make toys out of it."
The Bureau of Customs seized $2.93 million worth of smuggled
vehicles last year, part of the $866 million in seized goods,
government data showed.
"It does not pay to evade taxes in the Philippines so might as
well stop trying, because you will never succeed," Duterte's
finance minister, Carlos Dominguez, told reporters before
letting diggers loose on 20 slick-looking vehicles at a Manila
port. A further 10 were simultaneously destroyed in ports in the
southern cities of Davao and Cebu.
The government last year destroyed more than $2.5 million worth
of cigarettes bearing fake tax stamps.
Duterte, known for his bloody war on drugs and disdain for
criminals, has promised to usher in a "golden age of
infrastructure" over six years, worth $180 billion. He has
launched a comprehensive tax reform program to help fund it.
($1 = 51.4 pesos)
(Reporting by Ronn Bautista, Writing by Neil Jerome Morales;
Editing by Martin Petty)
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