Hanoi police, in collaboration with the city’s market management agency, inspected several food and confectionery production and business facilities in La Phu commune, Hoai Duc district. During the inspection at facility number 156 La Phu, authorities discovered 62 boxes of chocolate and dried apples, valued at approximately 27 million VND, with no invoices or documents proving their origin.

Authorities inspecting the business facility in La Phu. (Photo: Hanoi Police)
The inter-sectoral task force seized the illegal goods and issued a fine of 57 million VND to the business for trading goods without clear origins.

Illegal goods seized by authorities. (Photo: Hanoi Police)
On June 8, a mountain of garbage, including a variety of strange candies and snacks mixed with domestic waste, was spotted near the people’s committee of La Phu commune, causing environmental pollution and a messy scene. This discovery raised concerns among locals about the quality of snacks and candies supplied by traders in La Phu to the market.
Previously, at the beginning of February, a huge pile of discarded snacks and candies was also found at a waste transfer station located just a few hundred meters from the people’s committee of La Phu commune. Many types of snacks and candies with foreign language packaging were scattered, none of which had Vietnamese labels or information about production and expiration dates. In addition to the strange snacks and candies, discarded tea and sausage products were also found in a state of leakage and decay, attracting flies and causing a foul odor in the entire area.
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The economic police of Hanoi’s Hoai Duc district have reported that numerous businesses in the La Phu commune have remained closed for several days, only opening when customers place orders. This cautious approach to trade has resulted in minimal stock being ordered.
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