Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Do you bring back six cups and three insulated lunch boxes for your trip to Japan?

Do you bring back six cups and three insulated lunch boxes for your trip to Japan?

Yes

Oolong incidents in which Japanese tourists are punished for bringing prohibited items to China and returning home are common. In addition to fixed cash and valuables, local dry goods and meat products that tourists like to carry are prohibited items.

It can be said that "I accidentally brought it back to China, and I was punished for no reason". The fine is small, and it is even more worthwhile to violate the relevant laws. The Japanese window reminds everyone not to take chances, otherwise, the customs will be very angry and the consequences will be very serious.

Meat products, seafood and pickled vacuum packaging products also include various animal products such as sausages, floss and preserved meat, as well as red beans, coffee seeds and succulents.

articles prohibited from entering the country

1. Animals, plants and their products with dangerous germs, pests and other harmful organisms

2. Foods, medicines or other articles from epidemic areas and other diseases that can spread

3. Meat products

Most meat products are prohibited from being brought into the country (including vacuum-packed or commercially packaged finished products). Meat products, jiaozi with minced meat, sausages and all kinds of jerky may contain bacteria or animal germs, which can easily spread to domestic animals and plants.

4. Honey and honey products

Honey, beeswax, pollen and propolis may pose serious harm to the bee population in China, and they are all prohibited from being brought into the country, including products containing little honey, such as skin care products and medicines.

5. Herbs/traditional medicines

Traditional Chinese medicine and herbs (including proprietary medicines) are quarantine products that need to be declared for inspection. These articles may contain pests and diseases that do not exist in China at present, or contain endangered animals and plants that are strictly prohibited from entering the country.

6. Cooking ingredients

Cooking ingredients are also quarantine products that need to be declared and inspected. These ingredients include garlic, ginger, spices, and finished products with packaging, such as soup. Please try not to carry these ingredients. If you have these items, please throw them into the quarantine box or declare them voluntarily.

7. Fruit

Fruit seems harmless, but it will actually pose a serious threat to the fruit industry in China. Fresh fruits are forbidden to be brought into the country because they may be threatened by pests such as Mediterranean fruit flies and pathogens such as citrus ulcers. Don't take risks.

8. Seeds and plants

Plants brought into China will threaten local plants. Seeds may carry fungi, bacteria and viruses, which, if transmitted to local plants, will bring disastrous losses to domestic horticulture and forest and wood industry.