COUNCIL bosses are set to raid more newsagents and off-licences in a bid to tackle illicit tobacco.

Southend Council will step up its programme of inspections and enforcement visits at premises across the borough.

Since the start of the year, Trading Standards has already surpassed quantities seized in 2016 with a total 15,000 cigarettes seized.

In the last 12 months cigarettes and tobacco with a street value of £20,000 have been removed from shops.

Tony Cox councillor for transport, waste and regulatory services said: “The campaign against these businesses who are deliberately flouting the law will not relent.

“Traders who have attempted elaborate ways of concealing their stock have been foiled by enforcement officers employing more sophisticated detection methods.

“Shops that continue to sell illegal products are committing a criminal offence and will be vigorously pursued and prosecuted. If a trader is found guilty, they will face large fines or even custodial sentences.”

Testing of the products seized by Trading Standards has revealed that a large quantity of the cigarettes had a heightened fire risk.

These cigarettes failed safety standards applied to all genuine cigarettes, which are manufactured with a reduced ignition propensity.

This is a safety feature built into cigarettes to prevent or reduce the occurrence of house fires, where a cigarette is left alight on furniture.

A recent study by KPMG found that sales of illegal tobacco products cost the UK Treasury nearly 2 billion pounds in 2016.

Additionally, many of these products are manufactured using poor quality tobacco and may contain highly toxic products such as asbestos and rat poison.

The production and sale of counterfeit cigarettes is linked to large-scale organised crime, diverting billions of pounds in unpaid duty away from public services such as the NHS and often into the pockets of crime bosses.

While consumers are lured by the lower prices of these inferior products, they may be unaware of the acute dangers of smoking them.