Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 30, 2014
Even the very best that the Black race can offer are unable to keep themselves from cheating and lying, it seems.
Eight Black diplomats from Gambia imported 32 metric tons of hand-rolling tobacco which they said was for their own personal use, despite the fact that most of them did not even smoke.
Regardless of being promoted to the top of Black society, these apes could not resist the temptation to take advantage of Britain’s high taxation on tobacco and start smuggling it themselves.
Yusupha Bojang, 54, the Deputy Head of the Gambian Diplomatic Mission in Kensington, and his seven co-defendants allegedly ordered so much tax-free tobacco that suppliers could not keep up with demand. In some cases, the defendants – all of whom have connections to the Gambian Diplomatic Mission – were ordering tobacco worth more than their annual salary while still claiming it was for personal use, Southwark Crown Court was told.
The eight defendants allegedly masterminded the plot by abusing a scheme which grants tax exemption on goods to Diplomatic Missions, provided they are for personal use.
In a similar-way to duty-free products, jurors heard the diplomats could use the system to purchase items such as tobacco, alcohol and perfume, all of which were free of excise duty and VAT.
The court heard that defendants collectively ordered or were invoiced for more than half a million 50g pouches of tobacco during the three-year scam – despite evidence suggesting none of them smoked.
International Diplomatic Supplies Ltd and Chacalli De Deckerwere, which both supplied the mission, were unable to meet the extraordinary demand, jurors were told.
Opening the case, prosecutor Jane Bewsey QC said: ‘On any view that is a lot of tobacco.
‘No one can seriously be suggesting that the amount of hand rolling tobacco ordered by the defendant in this case could have been for their own use or for the use of their families.
‘Indeed there is some evidence that few, if any, of these defendants actually smoked.’
The court heard that among the defendants with diplomatic privileges were First Secretary Gaston Sambou, 48, from Edgeware, Middlessex; finance attaché Ebrima John, 38, from Kensington and welfare officer Georgina Gomez, 29, from Newham, east London.
Naturally, they are all denying the charges against them.