Source: http://gpost.ge/?site-lang=en&site-path=help/requirements/&id=276
Timestamp: 2019-07-21 14:01:48
Document Index: 720060540

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2', '§ 2']

Georgian Post: Requirements for sending international mail - Namibia
ü Customs clearance fee - 34.00 N / $4.53;
ü Threshold level below which items are free of customs duties and other taxes - 800-00 N / $105;
Languages in which customs declarations must be completed –English;
Web site address of postal administration – www.nampost.com.na
ü Threshold level below which parcels are free of customs duties and other taxes - 800-00 N / $105;
National holidays on which EMS items are not delivered: 1 January, 21 March, 19,22 April, 1,4,25,30 May, 26 August, 10,25,26 December
Web site address of postal administration – www.nampost.com
The below information is based upon the official source of Namibia
Animals including bees, their larvae or eggs, leeches and silkworms. See Part II, § 2.1.1.
Uncooked meat (including dried meat), organs and viscera of any animal; bacon and ham. See
Part II, § 2.1.2.
Natural honey. See Part II, § 2.1.3
Cheese. See Part II, § 2.1.4
Bulbs, tubers, tuberous roots, corms, crowns and rhizomes
All live plants, including trees, shrubs, bushes and roots, buds, eyes and stems for grafting and slips thereof and also mushroom spawn.
Cut flowers and flower buds (fresh, dried, etc).
Foliage, branches and other parts of trees, shrubs, bushes and other plants, mosses, lichens and grasses (fresh, dried, etc).
07.01–09
Manioc, arrowroot, salep, Jerusalem artichokes, sweet potatoes and other roots and tubers.
Coconuts, Brazil nuts, cashew nuts (fresh or dried).
Nuts (fresh or dried).
Bananas (fresh or dried).
Dates (fresh or dried).
Figs (fresh or dried).
Pineapples (fresh or dried).
Avocados (fresh or dried).
Guavas, mangoes and mangosteens (fresh or dried).
Citrus fruit (fresh or dried).
Fresh stone fruit.
Berries, other fruit (fresh).
Peel of melons or citrus fruit (fresh, frozen, dried).
Coffee, not roasted.
Pepper, not ground or crushed
Fruits of the genus Capsicum or of the genus Pimenta, not ground or crushed.
Cinnamon, not ground or crushed.
Cinnamon tree flowers, not ground or crushed.
Cloves, not ground or crushed.
Nutmeg, not ground or crushed.
Mace, not ground or crushed.
Cardamoms, not ground or crushed.
Seeds of anise or badian, not ground or crushed.
Seeds of coriander, not ground or crushed.
Seeds of cumin, not ground or crushed.
Seeds of caraway, not ground or crushed.
Seeds of fennel or juniper berries, not ground or crushed.
Ginger, not ground or crushed.
Saffron, not ground or crushed.
Turmeric (curcuma), not ground or crushed.
Thyme or bay leaves, not ground or crushed.
0910.91–
Curry, not ground or crushed.
Other spices, not ground or crushed.
ÿ Articles admitted condi
11.07 Malt.
12.01–07 Oil seeds and oleaginous fruits, whole or broken.
12.10 Hop cones and lupulin.
12.11 Plants and parts of plants (including seeds and fruit) of trees, bushes, shrubs or other plants, of a kind used primarily in perfumery, in pharmacy or for insecticidal,fungicidal or similar purposes, fresh or dried, whether or not cut, crushed or powdered.
12.12 Sugar beet (whole or sliced, fresh, etc), sugar cane, chicory roots (fresh or dried, unroasted), locust beans (fresh or dried) whether or not kibbled or ground but notfurther prepared, fruit kernels and other vegetable products of a kind used primarily for human food.
12.13 1213.00 Cereal straw and husks.
12.14 Mangolds, swedes, fodder roots, hay, lucerne (alfalfa), clover, sainfoin, forage kale, lupines, vetches and similar forage products.
14.01 Vegetable materials of a kind used primarily for plaiting (for example, cereal straw, osier, reeds, rushes, rattans, bamboos, raffia and lime bark).
14.02 Vegetable materials of a kind used primarily as stuffing or as padding, including kapok, vegetable hair and eel-grass.
14.03 Vegetable materials of a kind used primarily in brushes or in brooms (for example, broom-corn, piassava, couch-grass and thistle).
14.04 Cotton linters, unworked; annatto seed, hard seeds, pips, hulls and nuts, of a kind used for carving
(eg, corozo and dom). Vegetable products, not elsewhere specified or enumerated.
18.01 1801.00 Cocoa beans, whole or broken.
18.02 1802.00 Cocoa shells and other waste.
22.04–08 Wines and spirits. See Part II, § 2.4.
24.01 Unmanufactured tobacco; tobacco refuse. See Part II, § 2.5.
27.03 2703.00 Peat.
29.01–42 All drugs, serums, vaccines, medicaments and products for veterinary medicine. See Part II, § 2.7 and 2.8.
30.01–06 All serums, vaccines, medicaments and products for veterinary medicine. See Part II, § 2.8.
33.01–04 Products for perfumery. See Part II, § 2.8.1.
36.01–06 All explosives and fireworks. See Part II, § 2.15.
37.05–06 Photographs, films and video tapes of a pornographic nature. See Part II, § 2.11.
Chapter 38 Miscellaneous chemical productsHeading
41.01–07 Skins or hides, except articles made from skin.
Fuel wood, wooden sticks, roughly trimmed.
Wood, roughly squared or half squared.
Hoopwood, split poles, piles, pickets, stakes and wooden sticks.
44.07–13
Wood sawn lengthwise, blocks, strips and friezes for parquet or wood block flooring, not assembled, planed, tongued, grooved, rebated, chamfered, V-jointed, beaded, centre-beaded, or the like, but not further prepared, veneer sheets and sheets for plywood; wooden beadings and mouldings; reconstituted wood; plywood, blockboard, laminboard and battenboard.
Casks, barrels, vats, tubs, buckets and other coopers' products and parts thereof, of wood, including staves.
Builders' carpentry and joinery.
Beehives and wooden sections thereof, used; wood paving blocks.
45.01 Natural cork, unworked.
49.01–11 Literature of a pornographic nature, banknotes, lottery tickets. See Part II, § 2.11.
52.01 5201.00 Cotton, not carded or combed (unworked).
71.02–03
Diamonds and precious stones. See Part II, § 2.12. Coin. See Part II, § 2.11.
93.01–06 Firearms, their ammunition and their barrels. See Part II, § 2.15.
2.1 Live animals and animal feed of animal origin
2.1.1 Bees, leeches and silkworms
2.1.2 Bacon and ham
Importation of bees, their larvae and their eggs is totally prohibited except from the Republic of South Africa. Inspections will be carried out by plant inspectors and the Ministry of Wildlife,Conservation and Tourism.
Importation of leeches and silkworms requires a permit issued by the Directorate of Agriculture, Water and Rural Development and the Ministry of Wildlife, Concervation and Tourism.
Importation of bacon and ham is permitted if they are preserved against deterioration in hermetically sealed containers. The Ministry of Health may intervene where necessary.
2.1.3 Honey Importation of this foodstuff is totally prohibited except from the Republic of South Africa (subject to inspection by a health officer).
2.1.4 Cheese A quantity of no more than 5 kilogrammes of cheese may be imported without a permit (subject to inspection by a health officer).
Certain foodstuffs may only be imported with the authorization of the Directorate of Trade and
Indistries.
Imports are subject to inspection by a health officer.
2.5 Tobacco A permit must be issued by the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Rural Development; subject to inspection by a plant inspector.
Cigarettes may be imported in batches of up to 1000 cigarettes not exceeding 2 kilogrammes in weight. They must be securely enclosed in unbroken, unopenedcontainers containing ten, twenty or thirty cigarettes and bearing a stamp impression.
2.7 Narcotics For all drugs, a permit issued by the Ministry of Health and Social Services must be produced.
A permit issued by the Ministry of Health and Social Services is required for serums, vaccines, medicines, biological substances and pathological samples.
For veterinary medicine, a permit issued by the Ministry of Health and Social Services and by the
State Veterinary Service is required.
Containers (bottles or otherwise) containing serum, lymph, lymph-vaccine or similar substances for use in the prevention of human/animal diseases should bear a label, firmly glued or attached, indicating the name and address of the manufacturer as well as the date of manufacture or the date after which it is no longer advisable to use the substance in question. This includes allfoodstuffs.
2.8.1 Perfumes Importation of perfumes is subject to inspection by the Ministry of Health and Social Services.
2.11 Books, brochures, newspapers, printed matter, films, banknotes and coin
2.12 Diamonds and precious stones
The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting deals with these matters. Any importation requires a permit issued by them.
No person entering Namibia may bring any Namibian or South African banknotes or coins or send any such notes or coins to Namibia with a value of more than 500 NAD (Namibian dollars) (authorization from the Bank of Namibia required).
Namibian or South African banknotes being repatriated by foreign banks are not affected by this restriction.
A permit must be issued by the Ministry of Mines and Energy and also by the police.
2.15 War material No person shall, except on behalf onf the State, import into or export from Namibia any arms and ammunition, including any arms or ammunition in transit throughNamibia to any place outiside Namibia, except under the authority of and in accordance with a permit.
Explosives, including fireworks, are subject to the production of a permit issued by the police; this also applies to explosives in transit.
Any arm imported must bear the serial number or other manufacturer's numbers.
NOTE: The products listed in chapters 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 18, 27, 44, 45 and 52 require a permit from the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Rural Development.However, checking of the permit is the responsibility of the Directorate of Agriculture and the consignments should merely be inspected by the plant inspector.
N.B. Namibia has not published Part III.