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Tramaine Stewart fined for apple in New Zealand

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  • Tramaine Stewart fined for apple in New Zealand

    Tramaine Stewart fined for apple in New Zealand

    BY IAN BURNETT Sports Editor burnett1@jamaicaobserver.com
    Tuesday, February 28, 2012



    AUCKLAND, New Zealand – Jamaican striker Tramaine Stewart was hoping to grab the headlines in Wednesday’s friendly international against New Zealand, but sadly for the young Portmore United frontman, due to a lapse in memory he created news off the pitch about 36 hours early.

    Stewart, one of seven players and nine officials who arrived in Auckland on Tuesday morning (Monday evening Jamaica time), was fined US$400 for “failure to declare risk goods”, which turned out to be an apple.

    Having gone through a series of questions from immigration and uniformed inspectors, as well as ignoring numerous “declare or dispose” warning signs posted inside the arrival terminal, an apple was picked up in Stewart’s bag by the X-ray machine, a direct breach of New Zealand laws.
    Incidentally, there were a few warning signs posted inside the baggage claim hall which created much discussion among the Boyz. They warned passengers to being the ‘Last chance to declare or dispose” of any risk goods ahead of the final X-ray machine check. The signs depicted an individual going through an X-ray machine with a clearly identified banana, and another individual with a clearly identified apple tucked away inside their bags.

    Stewart’s defence was that he simply forgot that the apple was in his bag, thereby leading to the non-declaration of the fruit. After a near half-an-hour delay, where he was interrogated and processed, Stewart was sent on his way with the verdict of a US$400 fine. He has 14 days in which to pay the fine, which can be done online.

    But Jamaica Football Federation president Captain Horace Burrell, who arrived in New Zealand on the same Qantas flight from Los Angeles, quickly urged the players forget about what happened to Stewart and focus on the game ahead.

    “The Federation will take care of it, so just forget about it and focus on the game on Wednesday,” he charged.

    However, Jamaican attorney Colin Henry, a former RJR Hotline host, who now resides in New Zealand, and who had gone to the airport to greet the team, has taken up the case on behalf of the player and the Jamaica Football Federation.

    According to Henry, an appeal would be fruitless, as the New Zealand Biosecurity laws and procedures are very clear, so being an obvious unintentional act by a fairly inexperienced individual, he’s hopeful that the authorities could exercise some amount of discretion as it relates to the amount of fine levied.

    As part of the process in the biosecurity checks, players were asked to present their football boots for physical inspection, an unusual act in most countries, as the inspectors searched for soil materials. In fact a few players had their football boots taken away and cleansed in a closed location before being returned almost “brand new” is plastic bags.

    “They took away my boots although they were clean with just a few blades of grass on them,” a bemused Adrian Reid told the Observer.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz1ngagsGP4


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

  • #2
    This has happened to me before where I got an apple with a meal on the plane and forgot it could not be brought into whatever country it was I was going to. I believe I had the apple in my hand so I was not trying to hide it at all.

    If that is what happened to Tremaine then I think the Kiwi authorities are being unnecessarily harsh. It's not like the guy tried to smuggle an ackee seed into the country.

    In my case, they sent me to a special line that dealt with agricultural produce, I told them what happened and they simply took it from me and I went on my merry way. No fine, no embarrassment. I don't even eat American apples! Yeah, I don't know why I even took it with me. For that I should have been fined!

    I admire the care of the authorities in New Zealand still. Cleaning the soil from the boots is a good idea if you want to keep the country completely free from all sorts of pathogens. Next thing is to give all visitors a shower on arrival!

    But dem coulda low di yute still wid di apple!


    BLACK LIVES MATTER

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    • #3
      ah ... mi bredrin colin .....

      Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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      • #4
        The $400 fine seems very harsh & it looks like him green when it comes to traveling internationally. If yuh have any fruits, yuh need fi nyam it on the plane, or leave it deh.
        Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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        • #5
          But mi nuh green to international travel. In fock, I travel very regular!

          Everybody can make an honest mistake.


          BLACK LIVES MATTER

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          • #6
            New Zealand and Australia take things like this seriously, dem strict bad!!

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