Traveller deported after arriving at Perth airport with undeclared goods

Key Points
  • The 20-year-old Spanish man had his visa cancelled and was fined $3,300 for carrying undeclared cheese and meat.
  • He was stopped at last week.
  • He is the first person to be fined under tougher biosecurity laws.

A Spanish traveller has become the first person fined under beefed-up biosecurity laws after he failed to declare meat and cheese in his luggage.The 20-year-old man had his visa cancelled and was fined $3,300 for carrying more than one kilogram of undeclared raw pork meat and cheese.The man was stopped at last Tuesday when 275 grams of non-commercial pork pancetta, 665g of non-commercial pork meat and about 300g of goats’ cheese in his luggage weren’t declared.The Albanese government announced in October it would to stop diseases and pests from entering and establishing in .

Previously the man would have had his visa cancelled and been fined $2,664.

The man was stopped at last Tuesday. Source: AAP /

Travellers whose visas are cancelled are removed from on the earliest available flight and can face an exclusion period of three years before they are able to reapply. for Agriculture told news agency AAP the new laws won’t dissuade travellers from coming to .“I think the overwhelming majority of tourists do the right thing and they declare biosecurity risk items when they arrive and that’s what this guy didn’t do,” he said.

“If he had declared those products, other action would have been taken, but the problem was that he didn’t declare them.

“We are serious about keeping foot and mouth and other diseases out of the country and travellers need to remember that when they’re trying to enter Australia.”Senator Watt called on international travellers to think carefully about their passenger declarations and report anything in doubt.It comes as the issued a warning about the Lunar New Year which starts on Sunday.

The department’s Dr…

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